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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Biographical catalogue of the portraits at
-Weston, the seat of the Earl of Bradford, 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
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Biographical catalogue of the portraits at Weston, the seat of
- the Earl of Bradford
-
-Author: Mary Louisa Boyle
-
-Release Date: April 03, 2021 [eBook #64984]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Fay Dunn, Barry Abrahamsen, and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
- produced from images generously made available by The Internet
- Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BIOGRAPHICAL CATALOGUE OF THE
-PORTRAITS AT WESTON, THE SEAT OF THE EARL OF BRADFORD ***
-
-
-[Illustration:
-
- ARISE ✤ PRAY ✤ WORK
-]
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- BIOGRAPHICAL CATALOGUE
- OF THE PORTRAITS AT WESTON
- THE SEAT OF THE EARL OF BRADFORD
-
-
-
-
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-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
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-
-
- _BIOGRAPHICAL_
- _CATALOGUE_
- OF THE PORTRAITS
- AT WESTON
- THE SEAT OF
- _THE EARL OF BRADFORD_
-
-
- ❦
-
-
- ‘_A true delineation, even of the smallest
- man, and his scene of pilgrimage through
- life, is capable of interesting the
- greatest man; for all men are to an
- unspeakable degree brothers, each man’s
- life a strange emblem of every man’s, and
- human portraits faithfully drawn are, of
- all pictures, the welcomest on human
- walls._’ CARLYLE.
-
-
- _LONDON: ELLIOT STOCK_
- 1881.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- TO
-
-
- LORD AND LADY BRADFORD,
-
-
- THESE PAGES,
-
-
- WRITTEN UNDER THE PRESSURE OF MANY DIFFICULTIES,
-
-
- ARE AFFECTIONATELY INSCRIBED
-
-
- BY THEIR FAITHFUL KINSWOMAN
-
-
- MARY BOYLE.
-
-
-
-
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-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-IN completing the last contribution I shall make to the Biographical
-Catalogues of the Portrait Galleries of four English noblemen, I must
-make a few personal remarks. I began the pleasant task, which I
-undertook at the request of my dear cousin, Lord Sandwich, now many
-years ago, before my defective sight rendered the work difficult. The
-respective collections of Lords Bath and Cowper at Longleat and
-Panshanger next occupied my attention, but the increasing malady in my
-eyesight rendered every fresh step more arduous. In this last work, to
-other stumbling-blocks has been added the pressure of ill-health and
-deep sorrow; against these obstacles I have fought as stoutly as I
-could, cheered on by the hope of giving satisfaction to Lord and Lady
-Bradford, to whose family my own for many generations has been connected
-by ties of relationship and friendship. But I am well aware that in
-spite of my best endeavours errors may have crept into this work, and
-shortcomings must be but too evident. On the indulgence of the owners of
-Weston, I must, therefore, rely for pardon; proffering at the same time
-my best thanks to Lord Bradford himself for the kind help he has
-afforded me; while to Mr. George Griffiths of Weston Bank I can scarcely
-say enough to express my gratitude for his unwearied and valuable
-assistance. I wish that, in relinquishing a task in which I have found
-great delight, I could persuade some members of noble and gentle
-families to follow my example in rescuing from oblivion the records of
-portraits which adorn the walls of their homes. It has often been a
-subject of deep concern to me, while staying in some beautiful
-country-house, to find that the younger portion of the family, at least,
-were often entirely ignorant of any details respecting the lives of the
-men and women who look down upon them from the walls, and who in some
-cases have lived, loved, enjoyed, suffered, and died in those very
-apartments. To the dear old traditions of home such acquaintance with
-our predecessors and their surroundings lends many a charm, and I have
-found so much pleasure in my work that I cannot but regret my inability
-to the further prosecution thereof; but I have reaped a rich reward in
-the acquaintance I have made with particulars of the lives of the great,
-the good, and the celebrated; and as I wander through a
-portrait-gallery, the paintings of which are, alas! now but a closed
-book to me, the names which my more fortunate companions read aloud
-conjure up a whole host of delightful and interesting recollections.
-
-
- 22 SOUTH AUDLEY STREET,
- _August 9th_, 1888.
-
-
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-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- ENTRANCE HALL.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
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-
-
-
-
- ENTRANCE HALL.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 1. RACHEL, LADY RUSSELL.
-
- _In widow’s weeds. Leaning her cheek on her hand._
-
- BORN (_circa_) 1636, DIED 1723.
-
- BY VANDERBANK.
-
-
-SHE was the second daughter of Thomas, last Earl of Southampton, of the
-Wriothesley family, by his first wife, Rachel de Ruvigny, of an old
-Huguenot race, by whom he had two daughters, Elizabeth married to
-Edward, Lord Noel, eldest son of the Earl Campden, and Rachel, the
-subject of the present notice. She lost her mother when still a little
-child, and we do not hear much of her youth. Her father married a second
-and a third time, and it must have been about 1653 that she became the
-bride of Lord Vaughan, son of the Earl of Carbery. We are inclined to
-deduce from a passage in one of her letters that this marriage was one
-of _convenance_, as she says to a friend, ‘The selection of the partners
-usually rests with the relations, and not with those most interested in
-the matter.’ Of Lord Vaughan we have few records; but some letters
-addressed to his wife leave the impression that indolence was one of his
-chief characteristics, that he was dilatory in business and averse to
-writing of all kinds. It is fair, however, to add that these remarks are
-only based on surmise.
-
-Lord and Lady Vaughan resided chiefly at an estate in Wales, belonging
-to Lord Carbery, and at the present time (1888) the property of the Earl
-of Cawdor. The Golden Grove is famed for its picturesque beauty, and
-endeared to all admirers of Jeremy Taylor, by the tradition that he
-composed _The Whole Duty of Man_ in the grounds adjoining the house.
-Lord and Lady Vaughan made occasional visits to London, where in 1665
-she gave birth to a daughter, who only lived a few days. The breaking
-out of the plague drove them back to their Welsh home, and Lord Vaughan
-died not long after their return. On becoming a widow, Rachel went to
-reside for some time with her sister, Lady Elizabeth Noel, at their old
-home of Titchfield, in Hampshire, which had come by inheritance to Lady
-Elizabeth, as the eldest daughter of Lord Southampton,—Stratton, in the
-same county, falling to Lady Vaughan’s share. It was not long before
-(among many admirers) that William Russell, the second son of Francis,
-fifth Earl (afterwards first Duke) of Bedford, made himself conspicuous
-by the devoted court he paid to the beautiful young widow. The
-circumstance is thus alluded to, in a letter from her sister by
-half-blood, Lady Percy: ‘For Mr. Russell’s concern I can say nothing
-more than that he professes a great desire (the which I do not at all
-doubt) that he and every one else has to gain one who is so desirable in
-all respects.’
-
-Desirable indeed, for Lady Vaughan was young, beautiful, intellectual,
-wealthy, of a most gentle and loving disposition, and possessing a fund
-of unassuming piety. There was no disparity in the marriage, for William
-Russell was her equal, we might almost say her counterpart, with the
-exception of fortune, he being a second son at the time of his marriage.
-It was on this account that his wife for some time, in fact until the
-death of her brother-in-law, Lord Russell, still retained, according to
-general custom, her widowed title of Lady Vaughan. During the fourteen
-happy years of Rachel’s happy life, which were chiefly spent at
-Stratton, and Southampton House in London (both of which were hers by
-inheritance), she had to endure very few separations from her
-husband—such as when he was called away on public or private business;
-occasional visits to his father at Woburn; absences contingent on his
-elections in three different Parliaments, and attendance during the
-short session at Oxford. Then the correspondence between the married
-pair was constant and detailed, and testifies to their sympathy on every
-subject, whether important or trifling, political or domestic. Happy as
-she was in the present, with every human probability of the continuance
-of that happiness in the future, there was a strange foreboding, as it
-would appear, in Rachel’s mind, of coming evil, and it was remarkable
-how in those early halcyon days her mental eyes seemed fixed on the
-little cloud, no bigger than a man’s hand, in the horizon. It was indeed
-as if she heard ‘the footfall of fate on her ear’; for her letters to
-her husband, not very long after their marriage, are written in a most
-desponding spirit. After dwelling with gratitude and delight on the
-complete unity of their hearts and minds, she goes on to write to her
-dearest William, dated from Stratton: ‘Let us cheerfully expect to live
-together to a good old age, and, if God wills otherwise, then firmly
-believe that He will support us under whatsoever trial He may see fit to
-inflict.’ Noble and pathetic words, of which the sadder alternative was
-to be her allotted portion. The summer was usually passed at Stratton,
-the winter in London. Three children were born to them—two daughters, in
-1674 and 1676, and a son in 1680,—blessings which were counterbalanced
-by the loss of her beloved sister, Lady Elizabeth Noel. The society of
-the children enhanced the delight of their beloved home at Stratton. On
-one occasion Rachel wrote to her husband at the last-mentioned place
-from Southampton House in answer to a letter from him. She is so glad he
-finds Stratton sweet, and hopes he will live for fifty years to enjoy
-it, and that God may permit her to have his good company. But if it were
-not so, she is sure he would be kind to ‘the brats.’ Flesh and blood
-cannot have a truer sense of happiness than she has, his poor honest
-wife. Such simple extracts are truly pathetic, when we call to mind that
-in less than two years Rachel Russell was a widow. The circumstances of
-Lord Russell’s arrest, his impeachment for high treason, his trial,
-sentence, last days, and execution, with the part his devoted wife took
-in all these proceedings, are all given in our notice of Lord Russell’s
-life. In order to avoid repetition we simply give the dates here.
-William, Lord Russell, was tried on the 13th of July 1683, and executed
-the 21st August.
-
-After the last sad scene of leave-taking, elsewhere described, Rachel
-returned to her desolate home of Southampton House. On the anguish of
-such moments it is useless to dwell. She heard the hours from the
-neighbouring belfry, which sounded like a chime of knells, as she sat in
-perfect solitude—the little ones having cried themselves to sleep. Her
-favourite sister, Elizabeth, was dead; her surviving sister, Lady
-Northumberland, was out of England, and there was no one near enough her
-heart whose society she could tolerate at that supreme moment. Her grief
-was embittered and her indignation roused, not long after her lord’s
-death, by the report that was circulated calling in question the
-authenticity of the papers which he had given to the sheriffs on the
-scaffold. She found it incumbent on her to write to the King, speaking
-in the highest terms in her letter of Bishop Burnet, who had lately
-fallen into disfavour at Court. Burnet had been privy to the document
-written by Lord Russell in prison, and Rachel characterises the prelate
-as a loyal subject to the King, and the most tender and faithful
-minister to her dear lord. One of the last injunctions laid upon her (by
-one whose wishes were never disobeyed), was that she should take care of
-her health, and live for her children; and in the fulfilment of that
-duty she found her best consolation. In a letter to the Bishop of
-London, she says that she considered there was something so sublime in
-the subject of her deepest sorrow, she firmly believes it had in a
-degree kept her from being overwhelmed. And now began the long dreary
-period of widowhood which lasted so many years. ‘Time, that ancient
-nurse,’ which ‘rocks us to patience,’ found her indeed submissive, but
-had little power to deaden the poignancy of her grief. In a letter to
-‘uncle John’ (her lord’s uncle), she begs him to make some compliment of
-her acknowledgment to his Majesty for not having enforced the forfeiture
-of Lord Russell’s fortune. She concludes by saying: ‘When I hear you are
-well it is part of the only satisfaction I can have in this wretched
-world, where the love and company of the friends and relations of that
-dear blessed person are most precious.’
-
-Among Lady Russell’s most frequent and most intimate correspondents was
-Dr. Fitzwilliam, the friend of her childhood, who had been her father’s
-domestic chaplain. She also continued her intercourse with Bishop
-Burnet, and tells him how diligently she superintends the education of
-her children, Mistress Rachel, little Mistress Katey, and that precious
-boy with whose wild freaks in happier days she was wont to entertain
-papa. She confesses to the Bishop that she occasionally finds the
-employment of teaching irksome to her overtaxed spirit; yet on the whole
-it refreshes her, and she is resolved to prosecute the task alone and
-unassisted. This plan the Bishop highly approves, and he alludes to the
-circumstance in these words: ‘I am glad your children will need no other
-governess, for as it is the greatest part of your duty, so the
-occupation will be a noble entertainment, and the best diversion and
-cure for your wasted and wearied spirit.’ It is to Bishop Burnet that
-she describes her sensations on visiting her husband’s tomb at Chenies:
-‘I did not go to seek the living among the dead, for I well knew that I
-should see him no more, wherever I went, and I had made a covenant with
-myself not to break out into unreasonable and fruitless passion, but
-quicken my contemplation of his happiness.’
-
-There are two classes of mourners most prevalent in the world, those who
-give way to enervating emotion, nursing and encouraging the outward
-expression of grief, and those who fly to some frivolous and unworthy
-expedient to ‘lull the lone heart and banish care.’ To neither of these
-classes did Lady Russell belong; she faced her affliction bravely but
-submissively, believing with the poet[1] that
-
- ‘They who lack time to mourn, lack time to mend.
- Eternity mourns that.’
-
-Footnote 1:
-
- Philip van Artevelde.
-
-She spent a great deal of her time at Woburn, with her parents-in-law,
-where she and her children were ever welcome; often meditating, and
-frequently delaying her return to the once happy home of sweet Stratton.
-But she was detained at Woburn first by the death of her mother-in-law,
-and then by the dangerous illness of her son, which crushing anxiety she
-thus turns to good account. Speaking of the possibility of losing ‘the
-little creature,’ she writes to Dr. Fitzwilliam, ‘God has made me see
-the folly of imagining I had nothing left, the deprivation of which
-could be matter of much anguish, or its possession of any considerable
-refreshment.’ But the blow was averted and the boy recovered. She left
-Woburn, and instead of going direct to Stratton she started for
-Totteridge in Hertfordshire, with him and her eldest girl, while little
-Katey was left at Woburn to keep company with her aged grandfather.
-
-No one was more alive to the noble and loveable qualities of Lady
-Russell than her dear lord’s father, and he writes her a most tender and
-pathetic letter, evincing the deepest interest in her and her children,
-especially in the recovery of the young heir, whose illness had caused
-so much anxiety to the whole family. He addresses her as his dearest
-daughter, and expresses himself in the quaint and courteous, though
-somewhat stilted style of the day, hoping soon to have some comfortable
-tidings of her and her dear little ones, assuring her that his grandson
-is the subject of his constant prayers, and that while he has breath he
-remains her affectionate father and friend to command. Written from
-Woburn Abbey, the 7th day of June 1684; with a postscript: ‘My dear love
-and blessing to my dear boy, and to Mistress Rachel. I am much cheered
-by Mistress Catherine’s company; she is often with me, and looks very
-well.’ It is interesting to remember that the respective ages of these
-two playfellows were nine, and eighty.
-
-Lady Russell moved afterwards with her family to Southampton House, so
-full of memories, sweet and bitter, of early happiness, subsequent
-anxiety, and utter desolation. She was in London at the time of the
-King’s death, and although she had no reason to regret Charles, yet to
-one whose interest was never deadened in the course of public affairs,
-there was little to be hoped for in the accession of James the Second.
-The trials of Algernon Sidney, Hampden, and others, who were associated
-with the memory of her lord, made her wounds bleed afresh, more
-especially the execution of the Duke of Monmouth, Lord Russell’s most
-intimate friend. ‘Never,’ she writes, ‘had a poor creature more
-_awakers_ to quicken and revive her sorrow’; yet in alluding to
-Monmouth’s fate she owns herself void of reason, that she should weep
-when she ought to rejoice ‘that so good a man is safely landed on the
-blessed shores of a safe eternity.’ She was detained in London longer
-than she wished by the arrival of her uncle the Marquis de Ruvigny, who
-had come over from France to assist in the endeavour to gain from the
-King and Government the subversion of the attainder which affected the
-Russell children. Very interesting letters and documents on this subject
-are extant at Woburn Abbey. Lady Russell was very much attached to her
-uncle, and welcomed him, his wife, and a favourite niece, to her house,
-where the last-mentioned relative fell sick of malignant fever and died,
-to the inexpressible grief of De Ruvigny. Rachel’s anxiety on account of
-her own children may be imagined; she removed them to the country, and
-then returned to London to comfort her sorrowing uncle. De Ruvigny later
-on resided permanently in England, and became the centre of a small
-colony of French refugees which settled at Greenwich, and he ended his
-days in this country. The Earl of Devonshire, the faithful friend (when
-Lord Cavendish) of William Russell, who had offered to change clothes
-with him and remain in his stead in prison, had never slackened in his
-friendship for his friend’s widow; and he now came forward with a
-proposal of marriage between his eldest son and Rachel’s eldest daughter
-and namesake.
-
-In those days no time was lost in such matters. My Lord Cavendish was
-sixteen, Mistress Rachel fourteen. There were difficulties about
-settlements (_car l’histoire se répète_) among the lawyers, but the
-marriage did come off at last in spite of those everlasting impediments
-to the course of true love. Deeply interested as she was in domestic
-details and in arrangements for the future of her child, Lady Russell
-was no indifferent spectator to the rapid strides which James the Second
-was making towards the downfall of political and religious liberty which
-he was too short-sighted to foresee would include his own. When M.
-Dykeveldt, the minister plenipotentiary from Holland, arrived in London,
-he waited on Lady Russell by the commands of the Prince and Princess of
-Orange, being the bearer of autograph letters and the most flattering
-messages from their Highnesses, speaking in terms of the highest
-admiration and esteem of her patriot lord and the noble family to which
-he belonged, and assuring her of friendship and sympathy and the hope
-that they might in the future be useful to her and her son. Thus
-commenced a correspondence which brought forth important fruits in the
-coming changes. Her first visit to Stratton was very trying to her
-heart, and though grateful that the children were too young to share
-those feelings to any great extent, she could not but rejoice to
-perceive in Mistress Rachel some memory of the loss they had sustained,
-but then to be sure, as the reader will take into consideration, Rachel
-Russell the younger was already fourteen years of age and a promised
-wife! Three days the poor widow always gave to seclusion and reflection,
-the anniversaries of the arrest, trial, and execution of her lord. In
-the winter the family removed to London, and preparations were now going
-on briskly for the marriage, when the poor _fiancée_ fell sick of the
-measles, and it was not till midsummer 1689 that the celebration of the
-marriage actually took place, being hurried at the last, we are told,
-because my Lord (Devonshire, the bridegroom’s father) was in haste to go
-to the Bath.
-
-The young couple spent their (crescent) honeymoon between Southampton
-House and Woburn Abbey, and then the bridegroom set forth on a course of
-foreign travel to finish his education which lasted two years, while my
-Lady Cavendish remained an inmate of her mother’s home. The leading
-members of the houses of Cavendish and Russell were among those
-influential personages who had invited the Prince and Princess of Orange
-to come over to England to the rescue of the kingdom; and when they
-actually landed Rachel put herself in constant communication with her
-old friend Bishop Burnet, at that time in the suite of the future
-monarchs. She accompanied her aged father-in-law to London, in time to
-witness the flight of James the Second, and there is extant an amusing
-letter from young Lady Cavendish in which she describes to a bosom
-friend, the decision of the two Houses of Parliament that William and
-Mary of Orange should be King and Queen. She goes on to say she was
-present at the proclamation, which gave her great pleasure, ‘for were
-they not in the room of King James, my father’s murderer?’ At night she
-went to Court to kiss the Queen’s hand, the King’s also, with her
-mother-in-law, the Countess of Devonshire. She describes William ‘as a
-man of no presence; he is homely at first sight, but when one looks long
-on him he has something both wise and good.’ The Queen she considers
-very handsome, and most graceful.
-
-One of the first acts of the new King and Queen was the reversal of the
-attainder of William, Lord Russell; his execution had already been
-declared to be a murder by the vote of the House of Commons. Honours of
-different kinds were showered on the aged Earl of Bedford, the Earl of
-Devonshire, and many of Lady Russell’s connections and friends, while
-she herself was constantly referred to for advice and counsel by people
-whom she held in great esteem, such as Dr. Fitzwilliam and Archbishop
-Tillotson, who discussed with her questions of doctrine and faith, and
-the propriety or expediency of accepting preferment under the new
-_régime_. People of all opinions applied to Rachel to secure her good
-offices with the new Sovereigns, and Lady Sunderland, whose husband had
-been most instrumental in Lord Russell’s downfall, did not scruple to
-ask her intercession. Passing years brought fresh trials in their train
-for one who seemed indeed born for sorrow. In 1690 she lost her
-remaining sister, the wife of Ralph, Lord afterwards Duke of Montagu,
-and within a few weeks of her death she mourns that of her nephew Lord
-Gainsborough, ‘that engaging creature,’ she writes, ‘the only son of the
-sister whom I loved with so much passion,’ and now as a crowning grief
-she is threatened with blindness. It had been said that this infirmity
-proceeded from her constant weeping; and though one of her biographers
-argues that it was impossible on account of the particular nature of the
-disease, being cataract, those who unfortunately have experience in such
-cases know well how noxious to the sight is the briny nature of sorrow’s
-flood. It is piteous to read her sad anticipations of the coming evil,
-and how she will have to forego that great relaxation and comfort to
-her, of what she terms ‘society at a distance. But while light is left
-her she will work.’
-
-Lord Cavendish having now returned from the Continent was joined by his
-young wife, and there was a sad gap when dearest Rachel left her home.
-The fond mother writes to Lady Derby, Mistress of the Robes to Queen
-Mary, recommending her daughter, who was much at Court, to that lady’s
-kind protection; and now yet another of the young birds was called on to
-leave the nest. Mistress Kate was asked in marriage by Lord Roos, eldest
-son of the Earl of Rutland, esteemed the best match in all England. Yet
-there were reasons of a political and domestic nature which caused Lady
-Russell to hesitate before giving her final consent to the marriage.
-There is an amusing description of the grand reception which the newly
-married pair met with at the paternal estate of Belvoir, falling very
-little short of the pomp and splendour due to royalty on such occasions.
-We regret that our want of space precludes the introduction of some
-interesting details. Rachel did not go to the marriage, for noise and
-too much company made her eyes ache, and she was desirous to keep ‘the
-little bit of sight she had left,’ which deserted her as soon as a
-candle was lighted. There was still balm in Gilead. The operation for
-couching was successfully performed, and the patient, after making use
-of an amanuensis for some time, was able once more to resume her
-correspondence and enjoy ‘society at a distance.’ Following this
-inestimable blessing came the mark of royal favour which must have been
-a source of intense gratification to Rachel, Lady Russell. Her
-son-in-law and her father-in-law were both advanced to the rank of Dukes
-of Devonshire and Bedford. And in the case of the latter, the honour was
-enhanced to the old man, Lady Russell, and the whole family, by the
-tribute paid in the words of the patent to the memory of his patriot
-son. Sure never was sentiment so mingled before or since with legal and
-formal documents, but the words (or preamble as it is called) were those
-of the eloquent and refined Lord Chancellor Somers. The King in
-bestowing the highest dignity in his gift declares, ‘We think it not
-sufficient that his (Lord Russell’s) conduct and virtues should be
-transmitted to all future generations upon the credit of public annals,
-but will have them inserted in these our royal letters-patent as a
-monument consecrated to the most accomplished and consummate virtue,’
-etc. etc. All honour to the house whose patent of nobility well deserves
-the name!
-
-A general election was now impending, and Lady Russell received the most
-flattering proposals from the leading members of the Government, that
-her son should represent Middlesex in the House of Commons. She makes a
-very gracious answer, and after taking counsel with the aged Duke, she
-writes they have both come to the conclusion that a Parliament life
-would interfere with the progress of Lord Tavistock’s education, he
-being only fifteen. Strange times when schoolboys married and sat in
-Parliament! The young heir went to Oxford (instead of to the House),
-where he was more than once visited by his mother.
-
-When about seventeen Lord Tavistock started with a private tutor on a
-continental tour, which lasted over two years, and which the young man
-enjoyed perhaps a little too much. He made his mother a confidante of
-all his pleasures, extravagancies, and escapades, for Tavistock was one
-of those who loved the beautiful, whether in sights, sounds, or people.
-He had also grand notions of the style in which the heir to an English
-dukedom should live—must have a carriage with a fine pair of steppers
-and two running footmen; his cravats must be of rich point lace, and his
-suits finely embroidered. Moreover he found himself constrained to send
-all the way from Rome to Leghorn to procure a periwig, as the world’s
-capital could not furnish him with one to his taste. Then there were
-flowers and gifts of jewels to please the fair Romans, and added to all
-these ways and means of getting rid of his pocket-money, our traveller
-had a decided inclination for gambling. His letters are the natural
-outpourings of an enthusiastic youth in the heyday of spirits and
-enjoyment, rather too easily led astray, and although they caused his
-mother some distress, they contained nothing likely to diminish her
-esteem for her only son. He confessed his delinquencies so frankly,
-solicited help so humbly, and begged his beloved mother’s pardon, and
-her intercession for that of his grandfather, in a most irresistible
-manner.
-
-Within a year after Lord Tavistock’s return to England, he succeeded to
-his grandfather’s titles and estates on the death of that good old man,
-and in compliance with personal request made by his mother, the King
-bestowed on him the Garter, and shortly afterwards he was appointed
-Lord-Lieutenant of the three counties of Bedford, Middlesex, and
-Cambridge, while at the Coronation of Queen Anne he acted as Lord High
-Constable of England, and was made a Privy Councillor. He had married in
-1669 the daughter of John Howland, Esquire, who was created Lord Howland
-of Streatham, in order to obviate any appearance of a _mésalliance_. But
-all this prosperity was of short duration; eleven years after his
-accession to the title, at the early age of thirty-one, Wriothesley, the
-second Duke of Bedford, fell a victim to the terrible disease, which in
-those days (before inoculation or vaccination was known) wrought such
-ravages in England. When the character of the illness was announced, the
-Duchess and his children were sent to a distance, but the fond mother
-watched by his bedside to the last, and writes, after all is over, to
-her cousin Lord Galway: ‘I am in such disorder of spirits, so full of
-confusion, and amazement, that I am incapable of saying or doing what I
-should. I did not know the greatness of my love for his person, till I
-could see it no more.’ The poor mourner had scarcely time to lift her
-head, bowed by the combined weight of age and sorrow, before another
-crushing blow fell on her. Her sweet Katey (now Duchess of Rutland) died
-in giving birth to her tenth child, at the same moment that the Duchess
-of Devonshire was expecting her confinement. From her Lady Russell had
-the arduous task of concealing the fact of the other’s death. The two
-sisters had loved each other tenderly, and there was great difficulty in
-evading the inquiries which the Duchess constantly made after her dear
-Katey. ‘I saw her yesterday,’ was the sad subterfuge, ‘out of her bed.’
-Alas! it was in her coffin.
-
-The Duke of Rutland was not slow in providing himself with a second
-wife, and this unseemly haste was not calculated to soothe Lady
-Russell’s mind, but when she found that his intentions with regard to
-her daughter’s children were just and generous, she thought it advisable
-‘to let the matter pass easily.’ She had now arrived at an advanced age,
-somewhat infirm in body, but unimpaired in mind, with a trembling hand,
-but an unclouded intellect, and she busied herself in composing prayers
-and meditations for her own use, and in making, as it were, a full
-confession of her failings and shortcomings (which she called sins);
-reviewing as she did so the whole of her past life. This document was
-left unfinished at the time of her death. When at the age of eighty-six,
-her health gave way.
-
-A letter from Lady Rachel Morgan (wife of Sir William Morgan of
-Tredegar) to her brother, Lord James Cavendish, says: ‘The bad account
-we have received of Grandmamma Russell has put us into great disorder
-and hurry. Mamma has left us and gone to London. I believe she has
-stopped the letters, so we are still in suspense; the last post brought
-us so bad an account that we have reason to fear the worst. I hope mamma
-will get to town in time to see her alive, because it would be a great
-satisfaction to both.’ This letter is dated 26th September. On the 29th
-of the same month 1723, Rachel, Lady Russell, ended her exemplary and
-blameless life, so replete with stirring incidents, both of a public and
-private nature, so full of transient joy and abiding sorrow. She lived
-to see her children raised to honour and prosperity, but, alas! she had
-the misfortune to survive those who, in the common course of nature,
-should have wept her loss. She was buried by the side of her dear lord
-at Chenies, in Buckinghamshire, where an elaborate monument is erected
-to their memory.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 2. LADY ROBERT RUSSELL.
-
- _Oval. Tawny and blue dress._
-
- BY SIR GODFREY KNELLER.
-
-
-SHE was the daughter of Edward Russell, and widow of Thomas Cheek of
-Pirgo, county Sussex. She married her cousin, Lord Robert Russell.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 3. SIR ORLANDO BRIDGEMAN, LORD CHIEF-JUSTICE.
-
- _In robes of office: scarlet and ermine, with cap and gold chain.
- Gloves in left hand._
-
- BORN 1609. DIED 1674.
-
- BY RILEY.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 4. LORD ROBERT RUSSELL.
-
- _Oval. Dark brown dress. Wig. Lace cravat._
-
- DIED 1722.
-
- BY SIR GODFREY KNELLER.
-
-
-HE was the fifth son of the first Duke of Bedford, by Anne Carr,
-daughter of the Earl of Somerset. He married his cousin in 1690, the
-widow of Thomas Cheek, by whom he had no children. In 1660 and 1661 he
-travelled on the Continent, accompanied by his brother Edward, and a
-tutor. He served in seven Parliaments for Tavistock.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 5. HUGO DE GROOT, OR GROTIUS.
-
- _When a boy. Black dress. White collar._
-
- BORN 1583. DIED 1645-6.
-
- BY MIEREVELDT.
-
-
-BORN at Delft, the son of John de Groot (Dutch for ‘Great’), of an
-ancient family, Burgomaster of the town, and Curator of the recently
-founded University of Leyden, which was destined to become so famous.
-Hugo was one day totally to eclipse the fame of his father, though he
-too was a man of great learning and cultivation. Hugo was remarkable for
-his proficiency in Latin and Greek when a mere child, and, unlike most
-precocious geniuses, he fulfilled his early promise. He was placed with
-an Arminian minister at the Hague, and when only eight years old,
-composed some Latin verses, which are still extant. At the age of eleven
-he was entered as a student at Leyden, and became the pet (so to speak)
-of a circle of learned professors, of whom he was destined to become the
-foremost. In those early days Hugo distinguished himself in every branch
-of learning, addressed a Greek ode to the Prince of Orange, which gained
-him great κυδος, as did shortly afterwards a Latin poem in honour of
-Henry the Fourth of France.
-
-In 1598 Hugo accompanied Count Justin of Nassau (natural son of William
-the Silent) and John Olden Barneveldt on a diplomatic mission to Paris.
-Henry the Fourth, remembering the tribute paid him by the young
-foreigner, showed him especial favour, presented him with his picture
-and a chain of massive gold, and pointed him out to the courtiers as ‘a
-miracle of learning, and the wonder of Holland.’ The young Prince of
-Condé also took great delight in his society, and called him his
-secretary. To this youthful patron Grotius dedicated his first printed
-work, _Martianus Capella_.
-
-Hugo remained in Paris for about a year, when a summons from his parents
-called him home. On his return he took up his abode at the house of
-Prince Maurice of Nassau’s chaplain, a learned and pious man, where he
-studied law without neglecting his literary labours. He pleaded his
-first cause at Delft when only seventeen, gaining thereby the greatest
-applause. He published works on astronomy, physics, navigation, both in
-dead and living languages, and his description of the siege of Ostend
-(which place had held out three years against the Spaniards) was
-considered a masterpiece. His writings on contemporary history, in which
-he did full justice to the noble and patriotic deeds of his countrymen,
-also called especial attention to the merits of the young author, and
-the Government were easily induced to listen to the recommendation of
-Olden Barneveldt, and in due time Hugo Grotius was selected as
-historiographer, and this in preference to many candidates, all of whom
-were his seniors, while the salary was increased in consideration of the
-nominee’s acknowledged talents. The French King wished to secure him as
-President of the Library at Paris, and the star of Grotius was now in
-the ascendant. He was named to the post of Pensionary of the city of
-Rotterdam, vacant by the death of Elias, brother to Olden Barneveldt,
-with whom Grotius now contracted an intimate friendship. This office,
-together with other privileges, entitled the holder to a seat in the
-Assembly of the States of Holland, and afterwards to the same honour in
-that of the States-General. On this promotion, Grotius’s father was
-desirous that his son should marry, and an alliance was accordingly
-agreed on with Maria von Reigensberg, a lady of noble family in Zeeland,
-the daughter of a Burgomaster of Veer, in that province. The bride, it
-would seem, was by no means comely in appearance; she was stoutly built
-and of a swarthy complexion, but the future proved Maria von Grotius to
-be a woman of strong affection, acute intelligence, and indomitable
-courage. Shortly after his arrival in Rotterdam, Grotius was sent to
-England on a mission connected with some dispute which had arisen
-between the Dutch and English, connected with the whale fisheries, and
-here he was cordially welcomed by James the First, with whom he had many
-conferences, on matters theological, as well as diplomatic, while his
-society was eagerly courted by all the men of eminence in this country.
-But a storm was gathering over the calm horizon of Hugo Grotius’s
-hitherto bright career. On his return to Rotterdam he found that the
-religious differences which had been gradually waxing hotter and hotter
-throughout the United Provinces had now assumed a most formidable
-aspect. The whole country was divided into two separate factions of the
-Arminians and the Gomarites; the former party strongly opposing, and the
-latter strenuous upholding, the doctrines of Calvin. After some
-wavering, or perhaps we had better say investigation, of the subject,
-Grotius decided on embracing the tenets of Arminius. Remonstrances and
-counter-remonstrances were brought forward by the two parties, Synods
-were convened, public disturbances ensued, and the disputes which had
-commenced in a question of dogma developed into political animosity. A
-decree was issued by the States, with a view to putting down the serious
-riots which had lately occurred, and extraordinary powers were granted
-to magisterial bodies, a measure which, combined with others equally
-obnoxious to him, gave great offence to Maurice of Nassau, the
-Stadtholder, and he was violently incensed against the men at whose
-instigation the step had been taken. Between the prince and the friend
-of his youth, John Olden Barneveldt, great differences of opinion had
-for some time existed, and it was in the year 1619 that this venerable
-patriot and his friend Grotius were both thrown into prison—whence the
-former, after a summary and unjust trial, only came out on his way to
-the scaffold. In that solemn moment Barneveldt showed great solicitude
-as to the fate of his friend, and learning in answer to his question
-that Grotius did not lie under sentence of death, he exclaimed, ‘I
-greatly rejoice, for he is young, and will, I firmly trust, live long to
-be of service to his country.’ The trial of Grotius followed, and
-accusations as groundless as those which had been brought forward
-against the grand Pensionary were laid to his charge, including treason
-to his country, complicity with Spain, etc. etc., and he was sentenced
-to imprisonment for life and the confiscation of his entire property. He
-was conveyed from one prison to another, until the castle of
-Loevenstein, near Gorcum in South Holland, was chosen for his final
-resting-place. This gloomy old fortress was considered impregnable, and
-the most stringent measures were taken against escape; indeed the
-internal arrangements of the building and its contiguity to the river
-seemed to preclude all possibility of evasion. Here Grotius and his
-learned friend Hogersbaert were immured, and by dint of manifold
-petitions and ‘continual wearying,’ their faithful wives were allowed to
-share their captivity. But all intercourse was forbidden between the two
-men who were attached to each other, not only by friendship, but
-sympathy in literary pursuits, while the poor ladies were altogether
-denied the consolation of each other’s society; and when Hogersbaert’s
-wife fell ill, Madame Grotius petitioned in vain for the privilege (so
-dear to every gentle-hearted woman) of ministering to her friend in
-sickness, or cheering her last moments with the promise of watching over
-the dying mother’s six helpless children. The only proof of sympathy
-which one captive was allowed to show the other was in the transmission
-of a pathetic epitaph by Hugo Grotius, which was gratefully received by
-the unhappy widower.
-
-Madame Grotius had contrived to retain a portion of her own, when her
-husband’s property was confiscated, and with this small sum she
-endeavoured to make his condition less intolerable. She rejected with
-disdain the scanty dole allowed by Government for the maintenance of the
-prisoner, and constantly ferried over to Gorcum, on the opposite side of
-the river, to cater for little dainties for her lord, and the noble dame
-would stand for hours over the kitchen fire preparing the daily banquet
-for him and for their children. Maria was indeed one of those characters
-of combined strength and tenderness, which go near to form ‘the perfect
-woman.’ When her husband was first arrested, her anxiety for his life
-never betrayed her into weakness or cowardice; on the contrary, she
-wrote constantly, urging him to maintain his principles, and rather die
-than ask pardon, which could only be obtained through servile
-submission. Her admiration for Grotius, and her pride in his genius,
-could only be equalled by her affection. To think that a man, with whose
-name Europe already rang, whose writings were fated to influence the
-destinies of nations—that he should waste the best days of his life in
-prison—wither away, as it were, in a living tomb,—the thought was
-intolerable to her. The Commandant of the fortress, one Deventer,
-cherished a spite against his noble prisoner, arising from some family
-feud which had been handed down from the last generation, and he took
-especial delight in riveting the heavy chains as tightly as he could,
-and making captivity unbearable. Air and exercise were seldom
-vouchsafed, and Grotius, the philosopher, the metaphysician, the
-historian, the world-famed author, might be seen spinning a large top in
-the lobby adjoining his apartments for the best exercise he could get!
-Even the society of his beloved wife and that of his children did not
-suffice to prevent the hours from dragging heavily along, deprived as he
-was of the joys of a scholar’s heart, the books in which he could study
-the thoughts of others, the writing materials with which he could record
-his own; therefore Maria never rested until she had wrung from the
-authorities the permission to obtain from Grotius’s own library the
-volumes most coveted, together with pen, ink, and paper. Henceforth the
-captive’s life was no longer a blank. He devoured his classics, he made
-notes and translations, he wrote works on History, Theology,
-Jurisprudence, and thus shed a light on the outer world from behind the
-walls of his gloomy fortress. But these alleviations were not sufficient
-to content the faithful wife; she had more daring schemes in view. Had
-she ever heard, or does the Dutch language, so rich in proverbs, contain
-an equivalent for our ‘Love laughs at locksmiths’? Certain it is she was
-destined to realise the words of a lowly poet of our own days—
-
- ‘Oh! woman all would do, would dare;
- To save her heart’s best cherished care
- She’d roam the world tract wide,
- Nor bolts nor bars can ’gainst her stand,
- Or weapons stay her gentle hand,
- When love and duty guide.’
-
-She laid her train most carefully, most skilfully, nor did she allow any
-undue haste to mar its fulfilment. She had in her constant marketings at
-Gorcum cultivated the acquaintance and gained the friendship of many of
-the bettermost tradespeople of the town, and her maid Lieschen, who was
-market-woman in turn, was instructed to do the same. They both talked
-constantly to the good burghers’ wives, and interested them in behalf of
-the captive, the great writer and philosopher, and, what came nearer the
-women’s hearts, the tender husband and father. The plot was ripening in
-the devoted conspirator’s mind; but there came a moment of suspicion and
-alarm; it was reported that Madame Grotius had bought a coil of ropes in
-Gorcum, doubtless to facilitate her husband’s escape. An inquiry was
-instituted, when the suspected lady herself pointed out to the
-emissaries of justice, that ropes, even wings, could they be procured,
-would be unavailing in a dungeon where the captive on his entrance had
-to pass through thirteen different doors, each of which was bolted after
-him. She had in fact other means in store, and fortune favoured her in
-one particular, namely, that the cross-grained commandant was summoned
-to a distant town on military business, and Maria Grotius had already
-ingratiated herself with Madame Deventer by occasional presents of
-luxuries, to which the good lady was by no means insensible, such as
-venison, poultry, and the like. When the books were first allowed to
-enter the prison walls, the chest was submitted on its entrance and exit
-to a strict search, which had of late been deemed unnecessary.
-
-Accordingly, one day in the absence of the Governor, Madame Grotius went
-to call on his wife, who always received her kindly. ‘I am come,’ she
-said, ‘to ask you to help me. My husband is killing himself, poring over
-those dreadful folios, and making himself ill. We are both very grateful
-for the permission granted that he should have the use of his own
-library, but lately he has been working his brain, and tiring his head
-over those tremendously heavy volumes, heavy in every sense of the word,
-I want to send them away, and get others lighter and smaller. Now, of
-course, your word is as good as that of your husband in his absence. Do
-me the kindness to order your men to carry down the chest as usual to
-the water’s edge, and not demur because it is extra heavy. I have a
-perfect spite against those bulky volumes.’ The vice-regent of the
-commandant, ‘dressed in a little brief authority,’ made use of it to
-oblige her friend, and gave the order willingly. Maria went back to her
-own quarters. ‘Mother, dear,’ said Cornelia, the eldest of her children,
-‘did you not say to-morrow was the Fair at Gorcum, and that you were
-told on such occasions even exiles and outlaws might appear in the town?
-Why should not dear father go there in that case?’ Surely out of the
-child’s mouth came a word of wisdom; she little knew that her remark was
-hailed as an omen by her parents. Maria von Grotius next sent for her
-maid, and asked her the startling question, ‘If we can conceal your
-master in the book-chest, will you take charge of it to Gorcum, and
-incur the whole risk?’—which was indeed great. The loving wife would
-gladly have undertaken the task herself, but she judged it would be more
-likely to avert suspicion if she remained in the castle. The brave girl
-pledged herself to carry out the directions of her mistress to the
-letter, and the two women began their arduous and dangerous
-preparations. It was the beginning of the week, and the month March
-1621, that Grotius rose early and, kneeling down by the side of the
-empty trunk, prayed fervently for the success of the hazardous
-enterprise. He was dressed in soft linen and underclothing, and got into
-the chest, which was only four feet long, and narrow in proportion, he
-being a tall and strongly built man. His wife helped him to coil himself
-up, and then placed a large Testament as a pillow for the beloved head,
-the position of which she arranged so that the mouth should come
-opposite the small holes she had drilled to admit a little air. She
-closed the chest and sat on the top for a considerable time, to
-ascertain if her husband could possibly endure the confinement. Then
-lifting the lid once more, she knelt down and took a solemn farewell of
-him she best loved on earth, kissed him tenderly, locked the box, and
-gave the key to the maid. We can only guess at the feelings of anguish
-and tenderness which convulsed the heart of that noble woman at that
-supreme instant. Then she arranged her husband’s day-clothes on the
-chair, with his dressing slippers, and drew the curtains closely round
-the bed, into which she got hastily. After that she rang the bell, and
-when the servant who usually waited on them answered the summons, she
-looked out and said she was so sorry she could not go to Gorcum that day
-for she was not well herself, and did not like to leave her husband who
-was very ill; throwing out at the same time a hint that he was feverish,
-and there might be fear of infection. The servant said it was all the
-better she should not go, for the river was swollen and the wind was
-high, and in fact it was almost dangerous. ‘That is unfortunate,’ she
-said, ‘for my husband resolved that these heavy folios should go to-day;
-however, my maid is no coward, and she will take charge of them, even if
-the ferry should be rough.’ She then bade him go and summon the soldiers
-whom Madame Deventer had told off to carry the chest. They came, and on
-lifting it one of them said, ‘I believe the Arminian is inside, it is so
-confoundedly heavy.’
-
-The poor wife trembling behind the closely drawn curtains made some tame
-jest about the relative weight of a man and those horrid books, and then
-the precious load was carried out of the room. But Lieschen had many
-terrible moments yet to come. The soldiers maintained, nothing but a man
-could weigh so heavily, and one of them said he would get a gimlet and
-run it into the Arminian, and another told anecdotes of how malefactors
-had been smuggled out of prison in a like manner. Poor Lieschen had to
-jest, while her heart quaked: ‘Your gimlet must be a long one,’ she
-said, ‘to reach my master in his bedroom in the castle.’ Then followed
-the awful question, whether Madame Deventer would consider it necessary
-to inspect the contents of the chest, which she fortunately declined. So
-on the soldiers went, grumbling at their heavy load, and when they
-arrived at the wharf, the maid entreated that a double plank might be
-placed to carry the chest on board, for, said she, ‘those books are to
-be returned to a learned Professor, and I shall never be forgiven if any
-mischance should befall them.’ At length the transport was effected, and
-the large box deposited on the deck beside Lieschen. The river was much
-swollen, the wind was raging, the vessel heeled over to one side, and
-the girl had to beseech the skipper to have the box secured with ropes,
-and down she sat beside it in an agony of terror, both for herself and
-her precious charge. She then threw a white handkerchief over her head
-and let the ends flutter in the breeze, the signal that had been agreed
-on between her and her mistress to show so far all was well and the
-vessel in motion; for a servant in the castle had added to the women’s
-accumulated terror by predicting that the captain would not embark in
-such a storm.
-
-The unhappy wife was straining her eyes, dimmed by tears, between the
-bars of the window, while the maid sat shivering with cold and fear, her
-head between her hands; and on the top of the chest an officer of the
-garrison had taken up his post, and drummed and pommelled with his feet
-against the sides, and she dared not bid him desist from doing so—for
-what reason could she assign for interference? At last she bethought
-herself to ask him to get off, as there were not only books but fragile
-china in the chest, and he might break it by that constant shaking. The
-longest voyage, like the longest day, will have an end, and surely that
-voyage from Loevenstein to Gorcum must have seemed like one round the
-world to the terrified girl; yet her fears did not deaden her woman’s
-wit, and she was always ready with an answer. She bribed the skipper and
-his son to transport the chest themselves to its destination on a
-hand-barrow, beside which she walked. ‘Do you hear what my boy says?’
-observed the captain; ‘he declares there is some living thing in your
-trunk, Miss.’ ‘No doubt,’ was the answer, with a forced laugh; ‘don’t
-you know that Arminian books are alive, full of motion and spirit?’ In
-this manner the three companions, with the fourth concealed, threaded
-the dense crowds of the fair at Gorcum, and made their way to a
-warehouse which Lieschen indicated. It belonged to a well-to-do
-tradesman (relative of a learned professor, a friend of the prisoner’s),
-and the wife was one of those whom Maria von Grotius frequently visited
-on her marketing expeditions to Gorcum. The bearers of the chest were
-exorbitant in their demands, but Lieschen was very anxious to be
-relieved of their presence, and made little haggling about the price. No
-sooner had they departed than the poor girl hastened into the shop where
-the ribbon-dealer and his wife were busy selling their wares, and
-stepping noiselessly up to the latter, whispered the truth in her
-astonished ear. The startled Vrouw became deathly pale, and seemed like
-to faint, but she left the shop with Lieschen, and then what a moment of
-condensed and mingled hope and terror! Lieschen kneeled down and
-knocked. ‘Master, dear master,’ she exclaimed. No answer. ‘Oh my God, he
-is dead,’ cried the girl, while her companion stood quaking with terror
-and calling out it was a bad business. But hark! A feeble cry from the
-inside, ‘Open quick, I was not sure of your voice.’ The chest was
-opened, and Grotius arose, almost as from a tomb. The still terrified
-shopwoman took Lieschen and her master into an upper room through a
-trap-door, and then began to tell him how alarmed she was, and that she
-feared, if he were found, her husband would be imprisoned in his stead,
-and all their property forfeited. ‘No, no,’ said Grotius, ‘before I got
-into this trunk I prayed earnestly to God, who has preserved me
-hitherto, but rather than ruin you and your husband, I would get into
-the box again, and go back to Loevenstein.’ ‘Oh no,’ said the
-kind-hearted woman, ‘we will do all in our power to serve you’; and off
-she flew to her brother-in-law, a clothier of Gorcum, whom she found in
-conversation with the very officer who had been Lieschen’s
-fellow-passenger, and who had annoyed her by sitting on the trunk.
-Drawing her relative aside, the mercer’s wife explained the whole state
-of the case, and bade him follow her to the warehouse without a moment’s
-delay, when she would introduce him to the fugitive.
-
-The clothier was nothing loath to be instrumental in the escape of a man
-whom he greatly admired, being himself no mean scholar, and well
-acquainted with the writings of Grotius, on entering whose presence, he
-thus addressed him, ‘Are you, sir, that man with whose name the whole of
-Europe is now ringing?’
-
-‘I am Hugo Grotius,’ was the reply, ‘and into your hands I commit my
-safety and my life.’
-
-No time was lost. The clothier, who was acquainted with every one in
-Gorcum, found the man he could trust, a mason working on a scaffolding
-in the town. He beckoned him down, and told him there was an errand of
-mercy to be performed, to which a large reward was appended, and asked
-if he would undertake the task. The mason answered in the affirmative,
-and was then directed to procure a set of working-men’s clothes, which
-unfortunately proved too scanty for Grotius, and thus occasioned a new
-difficulty; the trunk-hose and sleeves were too short, the latter
-revealing the finely shaped white hand, whose hardest labour had
-hitherto been the work of the pen. The two women had much ado to patch
-up and lengthen out, and with dirt and clay, putty and plaster, they
-smeared the hands of the great philosopher, and sent him forth with fear
-and trembling, to run the gauntlet of many dangers. Next door was a
-library, which was the resort of learned professors, and book-lovers of
-all kinds, to many of whom Grotius was known by sight. He slouched his
-felt hat over his eyes, took his measuring-wand in his hand, and
-followed the mason through the streets to the bank of the river, where
-the friendly clothier met them. The weather was still boisterous, and
-the boatmen refused to ply, till the mason urged on them the necessity
-he was under of fulfilling a contract for buying stone for a large
-building at Altona, and assured them he would be a considerable loser by
-delay. These arguments were backed by the clothier, who put his hand
-into his pocket, and drew forth the most convincing of all arguments in
-the eyes of the boatmen. And at length the embarkation was effected; the
-ferry crossed in safety, and then the two masons walked to a
-neighbouring town, where they hired a carriage, and entering into
-confidential talk with the driver, informed him that the taller of the
-two was a disguised bankrupt flying from his creditors into foreign
-territory, and this, they said, would account for his wish to avoid
-observation as they passed through the towns. On went the little
-carriage, the driver of which was not long before he set down Grotius as
-a fool who soon ‘parted with his money,’ for of its value he showed a
-profound ignorance. In this respect we see that the driver differed in
-opinion from the rest of the world. They travelled through the night,
-and on the morrow, arriving early within a few leagues of Antwerp, they
-were met by a patrol of soldiers, who challenged them, asked for their
-passport, and inquired to whose service they belonged. Grotius evaded
-the question, and added jestingly, ‘As to my passport, that is in my
-feet.’ They fraternised, and the fugitive had now not only a military
-escort, but a good horse provided for his own riding; and in this manner
-entered the city of Antwerp. He alighted at the house of a banished
-friend, who proved to be in great anxiety on account of his wife’s
-illness, so the daughter of the family informed him; but no sooner did
-her parents learn the name of their unexpected visitor, than not only
-the master of the house, but the invalid herself hastened down to bid
-him welcome. The meeting was indeed a happy one, and although secrecy
-was deemed prudent, yet the news spread among a few compatriots, under
-the same sentence of proscription, who all flocked to the house, where a
-joyous little banquet was prepared, at which the illustrious journeyman
-mason, still in his working clothes, presided. Conversation flowed, and
-glasses clinked merrily that night to the health of Grotius and his
-gallant Maria, not forgetting the brave and faithful handmaiden. In the
-meantime how went affairs at Loevenstein? Madame Grotius had given out
-that her husband’s illness was infectious; but no sooner was she
-apprised of his safety, than she laughed her gaoler and his guards to
-scorn. ‘Here is the cage,’ she said merrily, ‘but the bird has flown!’
-The commandant rained curses on her head, and increased the rigour of
-her imprisonment. He went across the river to browbeat the good
-shopwoman and her husband, but all this fuming and fretting did not
-bring back the prisoner. Madame Grotius sent a petition to the
-States-General and to the Stadtholder, to which neither were insensible.
-It was on this occasion that Prince Maurice (who was not wont to measure
-his words) made the ungallant speech—‘I thought that _black pig_ would
-outwit us.’ We can fancy he said it with a grim smile, for very shortly
-afterwards Madame Grotius found herself at liberty, with the permission
-to carry away all that belonged to her in Loevenstein. Grotius, on his
-part, addressed a letter to the States-General before leaving Antwerp,
-in which he maintained that he had done his duty as Pensionary of
-Rotterdam, in the measures he had advocated, thereby incurring their
-censure, and he proceeded at length to propound his political views, and
-to offer suggestions for the restoration and maintenance of internal
-peace, concluding by justifying the means he had used for escape, having
-employed ‘neither violence nor corruption.’ And he furthermore declared
-that the persecutions he had suffered, and the hardships to which he had
-been exposed, could never diminish his love for his country, for whose
-prosperity he devoutly prayed.
-
-Grotius remained some time at Antwerp, and then determined on proceeding
-to France, where his wife and family were allowed to join him; and
-Lieschen, good, brave Lieschen, who would not rejoice to hear that her
-fate was one usually reserved for the last page of a story-book—‘she
-lived happy ever afterwards,’ becoming the wife of her faithful
-fellow-servant, who had learned the rudiments of law from his master
-during their captivity,—a study which the good man continued on leaving
-Loevenstein, and rose step by step until he became a thriving and
-respected advocate in the tribunals of Holland.
-
-But to return to Grotius: On his arrival in Paris he was kindly received
-by the French King, who granted him a provisional pension (very
-uncertain, by the way, in payment). In a pleasant country-house which
-had been lent him, in the environs of Senlis, he resumed his literary
-labours with great assiduity, working first at his ‘Apology,’ which he
-wrote in his mother-tongue, and sent off to Holland as soon as
-completed. This was a full and detailed exposition of the motives which
-had actuated his conduct, and of his religious and political sentiments.
-It produced the greatest possible excitement in Holland. The Government
-designated it as a foul and slanderous libel, reflecting on the honour
-of the States, of the Stadtholder, and all manner of bodies magisterial
-and municipal. The publication was interdicted, and every person
-forbidden, on pain of death, to retain it in their possession. In the
-meantime the ‘Apology’ was published, and eagerly read in Paris, and
-Grotius now set to work on his famous treatise on the Rights of Peace
-and War.
-
-The pretty country-house in which he lived was the resort of men of
-letters, and among his frequent visitors was the learned De Thou, who
-gave him the free use of his valuable library. In 1625, on the death of
-Prince Maurice, the exile wrote to the new Stadtholder, Frederic Henry,
-asking permission to return, but without success. He then sent his wife
-into Holland, and through her judicious management and the exertions of
-his friends, the reversal of the decree of confiscation was obtained,
-and his property and effects were restored to him. At length he ventured
-back to his own country in person, and first proceeded to Rotterdam,
-where he was cordially received in private, but the authorities would
-not sanction his appearance in public, and the same reception awaited
-him at Amsterdam and Delft. The States-General, of whom he disdained to
-ask pardon (‘for,’ said he, ‘in what have I offended?’) were exasperated
-at his boldness in venturing back without permission, and orders were
-given to seize his person, and give notice to the Government, while a
-reward of 2000 florins was offered for his capture; but Grotius was too
-much beloved; no one was found to betray him. Still his position was
-undoubtedly perilous, and joining his wife on her return from Zeeland,
-they took up their abode for the summer and winter in or near the town
-of Hamburg.
-
-Grotius was now overwhelmed with proposals of employment, and overtures
-of all descriptions from foreign powers—Spain, Poland, the Duchy of
-Holstein, and the hero Gustavus Adolphus, King of Sweden, for whom our
-philosopher had the profoundest veneration. With this monarch’s envoy at
-the French Court, Benedict Oxenstiern, a relative of the celebrated
-Chancellor, Grotius had formed an intimate friendship, and when they
-were both residing at Frankfort, they became almost inseparable. The
-King of Sweden died, and was succeeded by his daughter, the eccentric
-Christina, whose admiration for the fame of Grotius even exceeded that
-of her father. Through the medium of Oxenstiern she made him numerous
-offers, but Grotius declined all but one employment. He volunteered to
-return to Paris as the Swedish Ambassador, provided the Queen would
-allow him a sufficient salary to maintain his position as her
-representative, which nomination was most distasteful to Richelieu, who
-was then Prime Minister. But after a time his opposition was overruled,
-and Grotius made his public entry into the French capital, where the
-crooked and tortuous policy pursued by Richelieu, and continued by his
-successor, Cardinal Mazarin, was most distasteful to Christina’s envoy,
-added to which he was weary of politics, diplomacy, and Court life, and
-earnestly solicited his recall. Christina acquiesced in the demand, but
-desired him to repair to Stockholm, where she joined him. Her Majesty
-did all in her power by promises of provision and favour for himself,
-his wife, and family, to induce Grotius to become a resident in her
-country. But he withstood all her tempting offers. Many difficulties to
-his departure were thrown in his way, but at last he embarked on a
-vessel bound for Lubeck. He had not been long at sea before a tremendous
-storm arose, and after three days continual tossing, and constant danger
-of shipwreck, the passengers landed on the coast of Pomerania, about
-fourteen miles from Dantzig. Grotius was far from well when he left
-Stockholm; the climate had proved too cold for him. He had been very ill
-on the voyage, and after travelling sixty miles in an open wagon,
-exposed to violent wind and rain, he arrived at Rostock in a most
-enfeebled condition. No sooner had he arrived than he sent for the
-doctor and the clergyman, who thus describes his interview in a letter:
-‘If you are anxious to know how that Phœnix of literature, Hugo Grotius,
-behaved in his last moments, I will tell you. He sent for me at night. I
-found him almost at the point of death, and told him how deeply I
-regretted that I had never seen him in health, to benefit by his
-conversation. “God has ordered it otherwise,” he said. I then bade him
-prepare for a happier life; to acknowledge and repent his sins, and,
-chancing to allude to the Pharisee and the publican, “I am that
-publican,” he exclaimed. When I told him to have recourse to Jesus
-Christ, without whom is no salvation, he answered: “In Him alone I place
-my trust.” Then I repeated aloud the German prayer that begins, “Herr
-Jesu.” He followed in a low voice with clasped hands. I inquired if he
-understood all, and he said, “Quite well.” I continued to read passages
-of the Word of God for dying persons.’ Thus expired this great and good
-man, far from the kindred he loved, his heart still true to the country
-which had rejected and expelled him, his deathbed watched by strangers.
-His body was embalmed and transported to his native city of Delft, where
-it was interred with great pomp by his fellow-citizens, who at first
-proposed to erect a statue in his honour, similar to that of Erasmus at
-Rotterdam, but the idea was abandoned. It was reserved for his
-descendants to raise a monument to his memory in the said church. We
-transcribe the modest epitaph written by Grotius on himself—
-
- GROTIUS HIC HUGO EST, BATAVUM CAPTIVUS, ET EXUL
- LEGATUS REGNY REGNI SUECIS MAGNAFUI.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 6. THE HONOURABLE ANDREW NEWPORT.
-
- _In armour. Light brown sleeves. Rich lace cravat. Long hair._
-
- BORN 1622, DIED 1699.
-
- BY SIR GODFREY KNELLER.
-
-
-HE was the son of Lord Newport, the noted Royalist, by Rachel, daughter
-of Sir John Levison, Knight, of Harington, County Kent, and sister of
-Sir Richard Levison, Knight of the Bath, of Trentham, County Stafford.
-
-Andrew was Commissioner of Customs to Charles the Second. He was M.P.
-for Shrewsbury from 1689 to 1698. Died unmarried, and was buried at
-Wroxeter. He bequeathed his manor of Dythan, County Montgomery, and
-other estates in the same county, and in that of Salop, to his nephew
-Richard, Lord Newport, son of Francis, Earl of Bradford. Lord Clarendon,
-in his _History of the Civil Wars_, makes frequent mention of Andrew
-Newport.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 9. THOMAS WENTWORTH, EARL OF STRAFFORD, AND HIS SECRETARY.
-
- _Black dress._
-
- BORN 1594, EXECUTED 1641.
-
- AFTER VANDYCK.
-
-
-THE eldest son of Sir William Wentworth of Wentworth Wodehouse, County
-York, by Anne Atkinson of Stowel, County Gloucester. He succeeded his
-father in his large estates when only twenty-one, being already the
-husband of ‘a fair wife.’
-
-Shortly after his succession he was elected M.P. for York and _Custos
-Rotulorum_ in place of Lord Savile, superseded on account of misconduct,
-an office from which the Duke of Buckingham requested him to retire that
-Lord Savile might be reinstated, a proceeding which nettled the high
-spirit of Sir Thomas, who wrote a refusal so indignant as to make a
-lifelong enemy of the favourite.
-
-Until the accession of Charles the First, Wentworth, although a silent
-member of the House of Commons, was a zealous advocate of the Liberal
-party and a strenuous opposer of the encroachments of the Court. Through
-the instrumentality of Buckingham he was disqualified from voting by
-having the post of High Sheriff thrust upon him, and he was soon after
-summarily dismissed from his office of _Custos Rotulorum_. In the
-ensuing year he was summoned before the Council and sentenced to
-imprisonment for refusing to contribute to a loan (levied without the
-consent of Parliament), on which occasion he made a noble speech
-expressing his loyalty to the person of Charles the First and his desire
-to serve him in any way consistent with his duty to his country. On his
-release from prison he became a strong leader of the Opposition and an
-eloquent advocate of the famous ‘Petition of Rights,’ to which the King
-was compelled to yield his unwilling consent. Then suddenly came the
-adoption of that line of conduct, so differently judged and so
-differently accounted for by different biographers. Wentworth declared
-his conviction that the nation might now be content with the concessions
-made by the Crown, bade adieu to the party of the ‘Pyms and the
-Prynnes,’ walked over to the other side of the House and offered his
-services, head, heart, and sword, to the royal cause. By some he was
-termed a traitor, a time-server, an apostate, while others upheld the
-conduct of a man who chose the moment of impending danger to rally round
-the unsteady throne and the unpopular sovereign. Charles naturally
-received him with open arms, and loaded him with favours; but his old
-ally, Pym, meeting him one day, uttered these ominous words, ‘You are
-going to leave us, but I will never leave you while you have ahead on
-your shoulders’; words too cruelly redeemed.
-
-The murder of the Duke of Buckingham made way for Wentworth’s
-advancement. Raised to the peerage by the title of Viscount Wentworth,
-he was appointed Lord-Deputy and Commander-in-Chief in Ireland, and
-sailed for that ‘distressful country’ with a code for his own
-government, drawn up by himself, in his pocket, from which he never
-swerved. Lord Wentworth’s administration of Irish affairs, his transient
-popularity, his reforms in matters civil, military, and religious, his
-quarrels with the Irish nobles, his punctilio in minute questions of
-form and ceremony, his hurried voyages to and from England, are subjects
-intimately connected with the history of the times, but too lengthy to
-be detailed here. It would have been well for the Lord-Deputy if he had
-taken the advice of his lifelong friend and correspondent, Archbishop
-Laud, and had curbed his impetuosity on many occasions.
-
-In 1639 he crossed to England, was created Earl of Strafford, gained the
-title of Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland, was received into the King’s full
-confidence, and was for a time virtually Prime Minister. Not content
-with advocating the necessities of raising subsidies, he contributed
-£20,000 from his own privy purse (as an example to the nation) towards
-the impending war with Scotland. In spite of ill-health and increasing
-infirmities, Strafford crossed and recrossed St. George’s Channel to
-attend to his duties on either side; the last time in a terrible storm,
-and nearly died at Chester, on his road to London. Yet his indomitable
-spirit would not yield. He joined the King at York, and found the army
-in a sad plight, all hope and spirit fled, and the royal cause ‘in the
-dust.’ He became the real, though not the nominal, Commander-in-chief,
-and although unable to walk, and scarcely able to sit upright on his
-saddle, Strafford rallied the troops, upbraided the sluggishness of the
-leaders, and set a brilliant example of energy and courage. But the King
-stayed his hand and thwarted his activity, loud all the while in his
-praises, and giving him the Garter. Charles also insisted that they
-should travel together to London, a proceeding to which Strafford was
-strongly opposed,—two victims hastening to their doom.
-
-A few days after the opening of Parliament Pym began his long-meditated
-attack on his former friend—the blood-hounds were on the track, the hunt
-was up. Our limited space forbids us to do more than glance at the
-circumstances of Strafford’s arrest and trial, but in truth it is a
-well-known tale. He was impeached by Pym of high treason, compelled to
-listen to the charge on his knees, was given into custody, and lodged in
-the Tower. There is extant a most graphic description of the scene which
-Westminster Hall presented on the occasion of the trial, crowded to the
-roof, the King and Queen being present, and the whole court and nobility
-of England, ladies of the highest rank, whose tears flowed copiously,
-and whose verdict was unanimous in favour of the illustrious prisoner.
-It was well said by the elder Disraeli, that ‘Strafford’s eloquence was
-so great as to perpetuate the sympathy which he received in the hour of
-his agony.’ He had indeed need of his eloquence. Every obstacle was
-thrown in his way, especially in the matter of summoning witnesses,
-while his personal enemies were invited from all parts of the country.
-His confidence was betrayed, his words perverted, the whole proceedings
-were unlawful and unprecedented, and the Solicitor-General heaped
-insults on the accused. A Bill of Attainder was provided, and the few
-individuals who gave negative votes had their names posted up in the
-City as Straffordians.
-
-There was a passage of arms between the two Houses on the subject, but
-the vultures were hovering round, and would not be disappointed of their
-prey. Thomas Wentworth, Earl of Strafford, was declared guilty of high
-treason. On this sad passage, the saddest of all in Charles’s sad life,
-we need not dwell long. He had pledged his royal word to his noble
-friend, ‘You shall not suffer in honour, in fortune, or in life.’ Yet
-after some hesitation and delay, weeping all the time, he signed the
-death-warrant, laying up for himself hours of deep remorse during the
-few years he survived. The generous prisoner wrote to his master,
-indeed, to absolve him from his promise; but when he learned he was to
-prepare for death, he raised his eyes to heaven exclaiming, ‘Put not
-your trust in princes, or in any child of man.’
-
-During the short interval between the sentence and the execution, the
-captive busied himself in settling his worldly affairs, writing wise,
-tender, and pathetic letters to his relatives, and devoting his mind to
-the fulfilment of his religious duties.
-
-An earnest request to be allowed to visit his attached friend and
-fellow-prisoner, Archbishop Laud, was cruelly refused, and he was only
-permitted to send him a message, entreating the prelate’s blessing as he
-passed to execution. Accordingly, on the 12th of May 1641, Strafford, on
-his way to the scaffold, raised his eyes to the window of the cell where
-the Archbishop was confined, and perceived the aged and trembling hand
-waving through the bars a solemn farewell to the man he had so long and
-so faithfully loved. Thousands of spectators lined the streets, the
-passions of the mob had been so excited against the prisoner that the
-guards kept close to the carriage lest he should be torn to pieces.
-Strafford smiled calmly, and remarked it would matter little to him
-whether he died by the hands of the executioner or by those of the
-people. ‘He had faced death too often to fear it in any shape.’
-
-His friend, Archbishop Ussher, and his brother, Sir George Wentworth,
-were already on the platform. Strafford spoke for some time. He declared
-that his whole aim through life had been the joint and individual
-prosperity of the King and the people, although he had had the
-misfortune to be misconstrued. He denied all the charges brought against
-him, asked forgiveness of all men he had injured, and prayed ‘that we
-may all meet eternally in heaven, where sad thoughts shall be driven
-from our hearts, and tears wiped from our eyes.’ Then he bade farewell
-to those near him, embracing his brother, by whom he sent tender
-messages to his wife and children. ‘One stroke,’ he said, ‘will make my
-wife husbandless, my children fatherless, my servants masterless; but
-let God be to you and to them all in all.’ Taking off his doublet, he
-thanked God he could do so as cheerfully as ever he did when going to
-bed. Then he forgave the executioner and all the world. It was indeed an
-imposing scene,—Strafford on that momentous day apparently restored to
-all the energy of health and vigour, his symmetrical form, his regular
-features, with a complexion ‘pallid but manly.’ Once more he knelt in
-prayer between the Archbishop and the Minister, tried the block, and
-having warned the executioner that he would give the sign, stretched
-forth his white and beautifully formed hands, which Vandyck has
-immortalised, which Henrietta Maria, his sworn enemy, had pronounced the
-finest in the world; and one stroke from the cruel axe ended the mortal
-career of Thomas, Earl of Strafford.
-
-He was thrice married,—first, to Lady Margaret Clifford, who died
-childless; secondly, to Lady Arabella Holles, daughter to the Earl of
-Clare, by whom he had one son and two daughters; and thirdly, to
-Elizabeth, daughter of Sir Godfrey Rhodes (the marriage was a
-clandestine one), from whom he was separated for a period immediately
-after the ceremony, and it was some time before he would acknowledge her
-openly; in fact a mystery hung over the whole matter. Lord Strafford’s
-letters to this lady during his trial were couched in affectionate
-terms. She bore him several children, one of whom alone survived him. Of
-his connection with that beautiful schemer, Lady Carlisle, born Percy,
-there can be no doubt,—‘she who,’ says Sir Philip Warwick, ‘changed her
-gallant from Strafford to Pym, thus going over to his deadly enemy’; but
-there were many other names coupled with that of Lord Strafford,
-apparently without any reason, save the love of slander.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 10. COLONEL THE HONOURABLE JOHN RUSSELL.
-
- _Brown embroidered dress. Wig._
-
- DIED 1681.
-
- BY SIR GODFREY KNELLER.
-
-
-HE was the youngest son of Francis, fourth Earl of Bedford, by Catherine
-Bridges. He served with distinction in the royal army under Charles the
-First, and at the Restoration was appointed Colonel of the first
-regiment of the Foot Guards. At one time there were negotiations
-carrying on for his marriage with a daughter of the Earl of Bath, which
-was prevented by the young lady’s family, who were desirous she should
-marry her cousin, heir to the Earldom of Bath. The gallant colonel then
-became a suitor for the hand of the famous beauty La Belle Hamilton.
-There is a laughable description of him in the _Memoires de Grammont_,
-and we cannot but think that as the chronicler himself carried off the
-prize, he might have been rather more generous in his delineation of an
-unsuccessful rival:
-
-‘M. Le Colonel Russell avoit bien soixante ans, son courage et sa
-fidélité l’avoient distingué dans les guerres civiles. Il n’y avoit pas
-longtemps qu’on avoit quitté le ridicule, des chapeaux pointus, pour
-tomber dans l’autre extrémité. Le vieux Russell, effraié d’une chute si
-terrible, voulut prendre un milieu qui le rendit remarquable. Il l’étoit
-encore par la constance envers les pourpoints taillardés qu’il a
-soutenus longtemps après leur suppression universelle. Mais ce qui
-surprenoit le plus c’étoit un certain mélange d’avarice et de libéralité
-sans cesse en guerre l’une avec l’autre, depuis qu’il y étoit avec
-l’amour.’
-
-He was selected by his nephew, Lord Russell, to carry the noble letter
-which the prisoner had written from Newgate on the 19th July 1683 to the
-King.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 11. FRANCIS RUSSELL, FOURTH EARL OF BEDFORD.
-
- _Black dress._
-
- DIED 1641.
-
- BY REMÉE.
-
-
-HE was the only son of William Russell, called the Heroic Baron of
-Thornhaugh, whom he accompanied to Ireland when only nine years old. A
-curious picture at Woburn leads us to believe that the young Francis
-shared his father’s love of sport, being there represented in a white
-hunting jacket with green hose, a hawk on his hand, and two dogs in
-couples beside him. He was knighted in 1604 by James the First, at
-Whitehall, and the ensuing year he married Catherine, daughter and
-co-heir of Gyles Brydges, third Lord Chandos, with whom he lived very
-happily; and during the first years of his marriage he devoted himself
-to domestic life, and took great delight in study. Having received a
-legal education he prosecuted his researches into questions of law,
-parliamentary privileges and the like, which were destined to prove
-useful to him in his public career. He succeeded his father, as Baron
-Thornhaugh, in 1613; and his cousin, Edward Russell, in the Earldom of
-Bedford in 1627. He frequented the society of such men as Sir Robert
-Cotton, Selden, Eliott, and was ever ready, says one of his biographers,
-to uphold the liberty of the subject against such despots as James the
-First. On the accession of Charles the First, Lord Bedford continued the
-same independent line of conduct, and several times fell under the
-displeasure of the Court. In 1628 he distinguished himself by his
-steadfast advocacy of the famous Petition of Rights (to which Charles
-was in the end compelled to give an unwilling consent); and he received
-in consequence the royal commands to betake himself to the distant
-county of Devonshire, of which he was Lord-Lieutenant. Both political
-bias and private friendship attached him to the so-called popular party,
-which laid down as their principle for action ‘to prescribe limits to
-the monarchical power.’ The profession of such opinions naturally led to
-the fact that Lord Bedford, among many others, became an object of
-suspicion to the Court. A rumour was set on foot that he had been
-instrumental in the circulation of a seditious pamphlet, and on this
-plea he was arrested and imprisoned for a short time. In 1630 he took a
-prominent part in the drainage of the Fens in the centre of England,
-including the counties of North Hants, Lincoln, Hunts, Bedford,
-Cambridge, and Norfolk; called the Great Level, and subsequently in his
-honour the Bedford Level. In 1637 this generous and public-minded man
-had expended for his own share of this great work £100,000, but he was
-not destined to witness its completion. The part that Lord Bedford took
-in the political events of the day—in the struggles between King and
-Parliament, in the differences with the Scots—is not all this written in
-the chronicles of the civil wars of Charles the First’s disastrous
-reign? Suffice it to say that some of the popular Lords, and Lord
-Bedford in particular, became aware of the advisability of moderation,
-and the necessity of curbing the headlong opposition of the popular
-party. But we cannot do better than to quote the eloquent words of the
-great historian Lord Clarendon (then Mr. Hyde). He says: ‘This Lord was
-the person of the greatest interest in the whole party, being of the
-best estate and best understanding, and therefore most likely to govern
-the rest.’ He was also of great civility and good-nature, and though
-occasionally hot-tempered, and for the moment impatient of
-contradiction, yet his opinions were wise and moderate. He was a good
-adviser to the King, and served him in the end far better than many who
-cajoled and flattered him. Lord Bedford was a man of strict religion,
-and withstood the attempt to evict the bishops from the Upper House. He
-with many others of the same party were sworn of the Privy Council, and
-in this manner gained Charles’s ear, and exercised some degree of
-influence over him in regulating and modifying measures that appeared
-prejudicial to the common good. He was selected to be one of the Lords
-Commissioners sent to confer with the Scots in the hope to compose the
-long-existing differences. The King liked to transact business with him,
-and was inclined to listen to his suggestions as to persons fitted to be
-appointed to offices of state. Indeed Charles pressed upon Lord Bedford
-himself the post of Lord Treasurer, ‘which the Bishop of London was as
-willing to lay down as any one else could be to take up,’ but Lord
-Bedford refused the office. He was one of the few Peers (to his honour
-be it spoken) who exerted himself to the utmost to save the life of Lord
-Strafford. He pleaded his cause vainly with his colleague, the Earl of
-Essex; and finding him inexorable, prevailed on Mr. Hyde (in a long
-interview he had on the subject) to intercede with Lord Essex. He also
-endeavoured to keep the King up to his original intention of commuting
-or mitigating the sentence. He observed to Mr. Hyde that he thought ‘the
-Earl of Strafford’s business was a rock on which they would all split,
-and that he was sure the passion of Parliament would undo the kingdom.’
-
-But a sudden attack of illness arrested Lord Bedford’s useful and noble
-career. He was seized with the small-pox, and on ascertaining the fact,
-his first step was to send away his daughter, Lady Brooke, lest she
-should fall a victim to the fell disease which wrought such havoc in the
-house of Russell, seeing that his son and great-grandson both died of
-the same. Lord Bedford was very much averse to the treatment which his
-physician, Dr. Cragg, prescribed for him, namely, to be kept a close
-prisoner to his bed. And when forbidden to get up, he sighed dolefully
-and said, ‘Well, then, I must die to observe your rules.’
-
-Dr. Cademan, a medical man who had advocated a different treatment,
-published a pamphlet, which gave as his opinion that Lord Bedford ‘had
-died of too much bed, rather than of the small-pox.’ The same authority,
-speaking of the Earl’s devotion, says: ‘I never saw the like, though I
-have waited upon many who had no other business left but to die well.
-Commending his body to be buried with decency, but without pomp, his
-breath was spent before his hands and eyes ceased to be lifted up to
-Heaven, as if his soul would have carried his body along with it.’
-
-So passed away on the 9th of May 1641 Francis Russell, called the wise
-Earl of Bedford, a loss to the unfortunate Strafford, whose sentence was
-carried out in a few days; a loss to the King, whose wholesome adviser
-he was; a loss to the popular party, whose violence he would fain have
-curbed. His death was universally mourned, and every mark of respect
-paid to his memory. Three hundred coaches with Peers and their servants
-attended; a long and solemn procession followed the body on its road to
-Chenies, the burying-place of the Russell family, with led horses,
-banners displayed, Garter King-at-Arms, ‘all the pomp of heraldry and
-pride of power’; and this great and good man was interred amid the
-prayers and tears of a large multitude. His widow survived him some
-years, and was then buried beside him.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- _No_. 13. WILLIAM, LORD RUSSELL.
-
- _In armour. Long flowing hair._
-
- BORN 1639, EXECUTED 1683.
-
- BY RUSSELL.
-
-
-HE was born second son of William, fifth Earl, afterwards first Duke, of
-Bedford. He went with his elder brother, Lord Russell, to Cambridge, and
-later travelled in his company, and that of a learned tutor on the
-Continent. At Augsburg the brothers separated, and William proceeded to
-Lyons, whence his letters home proved he amused himself very much, and
-amidst a gay and brilliant society formed a close acquaintance with the
-eccentric and celebrated ex-Queen, Christina of Sweden, who appeared to
-have gained great influence over the young Englishman, who evinced a
-great inclination for some time to enter the Swedish army as a
-volunteer. His letters during his sojourn in France, many of which were
-addressed to his tutor, to whom he was much attached, do him honour.
-When _en route_ for England he fell sick at Paris, and finding himself,
-as he writes, ‘at the gates of death,’ he assures his old friend that he
-prays constantly to God to ‘give me grace that I may employ in His
-service the life His mercy has spared to me.’
-
-On his arrival at home, William for a time devoted himself to the care
-of his brother, then in ill-health, and to giving his father assistance
-in domestic affairs. At the Restoration, Lord Bedford and his family
-were marked out for favour, and the Earl carried the sceptre at the
-Coronation, and soon after William was elected member for Tavistock.
-Handsome, accomplished, and nobly born, he became a shining light at the
-brilliant Court of Charles the Second, but his tastes were too earnest,
-and his bias too virtuous to find any lasting satisfaction in a society
-so frivolous and immoral. An early attachment to a good and beautiful
-woman proved a strong safeguard to the young courtier, which was crowned
-about the year 1669, by a marriage, the happiness of which family and
-historical records can vouch. It was indeed a well-assorted union, the
-commencement of ‘domestic bliss,’ as the poet says, ‘the only happiness
-which has survived the Fall.’ William Russell’s choice was Rachel, the
-daughter of the noble loyalist, Thomas Wriothesley, Earl of Southampton,
-and the daughter-in-law of the Earl of Carbery, being the widow of his
-eldest son, Lord Vaughan. We refer our readers to our sketch of Lady
-Russell’s life, who retained her widowed title of Lady Vaughan until the
-death of William’s elder brother. In the meantime he began his political
-career by a zealous and conscientious attention to his parliamentary
-duties, and was not long before he incurred the lasting animosity of the
-Duke of York, and indeed of the King himself, by his zealous opposition
-to many arbitrary measures proposed by the Court party, which, in
-Russell’s opinion, were calculated to endanger ‘the liberty of the
-subject, the safety of the kingdom, and the welfare of the Protestant
-religion.’ In 1679 he was made a Privy Councillor, a dignity he did not
-long enjoy, for we read shortly after ‘that the Lords Russell,
-Cavendish, and others, finding the King’s heart and head were against
-popular councils, and that their presence in Council could no longer
-prevent pernicious measures, and not being willing to serve him against
-the interests of their country, went to him together, and desired him to
-excuse their attendance any more at Council.’ The King gladly accepted
-their resignation, for he wanted men who would promote his arbitrary
-measures, and thus, says Smollett, ‘Lord Russell, one of the most
-popular and virtuous men of the nation, quitted the Council Board.’
-
-He was a prominent promoter of the Bill of Exclusion to prevent the Duke
-of York, or any Papist whatsoever, from succeeding to the Throne. When
-the Bill passed the Commons, it was Lord Russell who carried it in
-person to the Upper House, on which occasion he made a most eloquent
-speech, and wound up by saying that in the event of changes so
-occurring, he should be prevented living a Protestant, it was his fixed
-resolution to die one. But all opposition to the Papal succession was
-unavailing, and in 1681 the King dissolved Parliament, by which means
-Lord Russell found himself at liberty for a short space to indulge in
-the retirement and pleasures of a happy home with the wife and children
-he adored. But his country’s welfare was ever paramount in his mind, and
-he kept up his interest in public affairs.
-
-During the ensuing summer the Prince of Orange visited England, and had
-several interviews and confidential conversations with Lord Russell,
-who, moreover, made himself doubly obnoxious to the Court party by
-meeting the Duke of Monmouth in his progress through the North, at the
-head of a considerable body of men.
-
-In conversation with his domestic chaplain Lord Russell once remarked
-that he was convinced he should one day fall a sacrifice, since
-arbitrary government could never be set up in England while he lived to
-oppose it, and that to the last drop of his blood. And it was evident he
-took little pains to prevent the fulfilment of his own prophecy. This
-was a period of plots and counter-plots. There had been much talk lately
-of a Popish plot, and now the Protestant, or Rye House Plot, was said to
-have been discovered, the object of which, it was affirmed, was to seize
-the persons of the King and Duke of York on their return from Newmarket.
-The enemies of Lord Russell, and several other noblemen, who
-participated in his political views, were glad to take hold of any
-pretext to secure the ruin of the men on whose downfall they were bent,
-and many of the highest of England’s nobility were now loudly accused of
-being implicated in the conspiracy, and orders were issued for their
-arrest. The Duke of Monmouth was not forthcoming, but Lord Russell,
-strong in his own innocence, refused to make his escape, though strongly
-urged to do so by many of his friends. He disdained the notion of
-flight, though from the beginning he gave himself up for lost. So he sat
-calmly in his study awaiting the arrival of the officers, to whom he
-made no resistance, and was conveyed first to the Tower and thence to
-Newgate.
-
-Lord Essex was the next so-called conspirator apprehended, and he also
-refused every argument for flight, saying that he considered his own
-life not worth saving, if by drawing suspicion on Lord Russell, so
-valuable a life as his, also should be endangered. The Duke of Monmouth
-had it conveyed to Lord Russell that he would willingly give himself up
-and share his fate. But the noble prisoner answered it would be no
-advantage to him that his friends should suffer, and so, on the 13th of
-July 1683, William, Lord Russell, stood at the bar of the Old Bailey on
-a charge of high treason. That very morning the Lord Essex, who was only
-a prisoner of three days’ standing, was found dead in the Tower with his
-throat cut. This strange and melancholy event gave rise to conflicting
-rumours. Many people were of opinion that there had been foul play, and
-Evelyn was as surprised as he was grieved, ‘My Lord Essex being so well
-known to me as a man of sober and religious deportment.’ The news coming
-to Westminster Hall on the very day of Lord Russell’s trial, was said to
-have had no little influence on the verdict which the jury returned. The
-prisoner’s demeanour during his examination was marked by calm dignity
-and absence of any sign of agitation, though he occasionally
-expostulated against the injustice with which the proceedings were
-carried on. Being asked how he wished to be tried, he replied, ‘By God
-and my country.’ Alas! alas! the voices of Justice and of Mercy were
-alike unheard in the courts of law that day. The prisoner represented
-that he had been kept in ignorance, until the moment of his appearing at
-the bar, of the nature of the charges which were to be brought against
-him, and that he was allowed no time to select his own counsel, etc.
-etc. He asked permission to employ the hand of another to take notes of
-the evidence, upon which the Attorney-General (resolved to deprive him
-of the help of any counsel) churlishly replied, he might have one of his
-own servants to assist him. ‘Then,’ said Lord Russell, ‘the only
-assistance I will ask is that of the lady beside me.’ At these words,
-says a contemporary writer, ‘a thrill of anguish passed through the
-court’—a moment of intense pathos, the frequent and glowing records of
-which, by poet, painter, and historian, pale before the vivid colouring
-of the fact itself: the noble prisoner turning in his hour of utmost
-need to the gentle helpmate beside him, his servant, in the literal
-acceptation of the word—for who could love or serve him better? Rachel,
-Lady Russell, rose with a calm she had borrowed from her husband’s
-example. Crushing down and stifling the varied emotions of sorrow,
-indignation, and apprehension, forcing back the rising tears lest they
-should dim the vision of the scribe, clenching the small white hand to
-restore its requisite steadiness, Rachel stood motionless for an
-instant, with every eye upon her—the cold scrutiny of the cruel judges,
-the inquisitive stare of false friends and perjured witnesses,—while the
-Attorney-General, in a more subdued tone of voice, said, ‘As the lady
-pleases.’ She then with a firm step left her husband’s side, and took up
-her post at the table below. That picture still remains stamped on the
-memory of her countrymen through the lapse of more than two centuries,
-and many who only half remember the details of that remarkable trial,
-and its undoubted importance as regards subsequent events, still bear in
-mind the touching episode of the beautiful secretary, the faithful
-servant, the devoted wife and widow of William, Lord Russell. The jury
-were not long in returning the verdict of Guilty,—‘an act,’ says Rapin,
-‘of the most crying injustice that ever was perpetrated in England.’
-
-To the cruel and hideous sentence for the execution of ‘a traitor,’
-which was read aloud in English (instead of Latin) by his own desire,
-the prisoner listened with that decency and composure, ‘which,’ Burnet
-tells us, ‘characterised his whole behaviour during the trial; even as
-if the issue were a matter of indifference to him.’ The result of the
-proceedings produced an intense excitement. The most strenuous efforts
-were made in all quarters to save Lord Russell’s life both at home and
-abroad. It was intimated to the King that M. de Ruvigny, a kinsman of
-Lady Russell’s in favour at the Court of France, was coming over with a
-special message from Louis the Fourteenth to intercede for the prisoner;
-but Charles was said to have answered with cruel levity that he should
-be ‘happy to receive M. de Ruvigny, but that Lord Russell’s head would
-be off before he arrived.’ Many men of position and influence waited on
-the King in person, and argued with him on the bad effect the execution
-would produce in many quarters. The Duchess of Portsmouth had a large
-sum of money offered to secure her interference, but all in vain. Then
-Lord Russell’s ‘noble consort’ cast herself at the King’s feet, and
-adjured him, by the memory of her father, the loyal and gallant
-Southampton, to let his services atone for ‘the errors into which honest
-but mistaken principles had seduced her husband.’ This was the last
-instance of female weakness, if it deserve the name, into which Rachel
-Russell was betrayed. But Charles was inexorable. He whose weak heart
-was too easily swayed by beauty, too frequently overcome by emotion of a
-baser kind, remained impervious to the tears and anguish of this lovely
-and virtuous woman. Even the scanty mercy of a short respite was denied
-her. She rose from her knees, collected her courage, and from that
-moment she fortified herself against the fatal blow, and endeavoured by
-her example to strengthen the resolution of her husband. ‘She gave me no
-disturbance,’ was one of the touching tributes he paid her. Lord
-Cavendish sent a proposition to the prisoner offering to facilitate his
-escape, even to change clothes with him, and remain in his stead; but
-Lord Russell returned a firm though grateful refusal, considering the
-plan impracticable, unlawful, and dangerous to his faithful friend, and
-so prepared quietly and calmly for the end, expressing his conviction
-that the day of his execution would not be so disturbing to him as the
-day of his trial. The time allotted to him was short. He occupied
-himself much in writing. He addressed a letter to the King, which he
-intrusted to his uncle, Colonel John Russell, to deliver to Charles
-immediately after the execution; a noble and temperate letter, in which
-the writer hopes his Majesty will excuse the presumption of an attainted
-man. He asks pardon for anything he might have said or done that looked
-like a want of respect to the King or duty to the Government. He acquits
-himself of all designs (and goes on to declare his ignorance of any
-such) against either King or Government.
-
- ‘Yet I do not deny that I have heard many things, and said some,
- contrary to my duty, for which I have asked God’s pardon, and do
- now humbly beg your Majesty’s. I take the liberty to add _that
- though I have met with hard measure, yet I forgive all concerned
- in it, from the highest to the lowest_; and I pray God to bless
- your person and government, and that the public peace and the
- true Protestant religion may be preserved under you; and I crave
- leave to end my days with this sincere protestation, that my
- heart was ever devoted to that which I thought was your true
- interest, in which, if I was mistaken, I hope that your
- displeasure will end with my life, and that no part of it shall
- fall on my wife and children, being the last petition that will
- ever be offered from your Majesty’s most faithful, most dutiful,
- and most obedient servant, RUSSELL.
-
- ‘NEWGATE, _July 19, 1683_.’
-
-He further drew up a long and detailed defence and explanation of his
-whole conduct, to be given by his own hands to the Sheriffs on the
-scaffold,—a precious record, preserved in letters of gold among the most
-cherished archives at Woburn, the scene of the noble writer’s youth and
-childhood.
-
-The evening before his death, after bidding adieu to some of his
-friends, his wife and children came to take a last farewell. He parted
-with them (tender father and devoted husband as he was) in composed
-silence, and Lady Russell had such control over herself that when she
-was gone he said, ‘The bitterness of death is past.’ ‘He talked,’ says
-Burnet, ‘at much length about her. It had rather grieved him that she
-had run about so much beating every bush for his preservation, but that,
-perhaps, it would be a mitigation of her sorrow to feel she had done all
-in her power to save him.’ ‘Yet,’ he said, ‘what a blessing it was that
-she had that magnanimity of spirit joined to her tenderness as never to
-have desired him to do a base thing for the saving of his own life;
-there was a signal providence of God in giving him such a wife, with
-birth, fortune, understanding, religion, and great kindness to him. But
-her carriage in his extremity was above all! It was a comfort to leave
-his children in such a mother’s hands, who had promised him to take care
-of herself for his sake.’ Burnet further tells us that ‘the prisoner
-received the Sacrament from Archbishop Tillotson with much devotion, and
-I preached two short sermons, which he heard with great affection. He
-went into his chamber about midnight, and I stayed the whole night in
-the adjoining room. He went to bed about two in the morning, and was
-fast asleep about four, when, by his desire, we called him. He was
-quickly dressed, and lost no time in shaving, for he said he was not
-concerned in his good looks that day. He went two or three times back
-into his chamber to pray by himself, and then came and prayed again with
-Tillotson and me. He drank a little tea and some sherry, and then he
-said now he had done with time, and was going to eternity. He asked what
-he should give the executioner, and I told him ten guineas; he smiled,
-and said it was a pretty thing to give a fee to have his head cut off.
-The Sheriffs came about ten o’clock; Lord Cavendish was waiting below to
-take leave of him. They embraced very tenderly. Lord Russell on a second
-thought came back and pressed Cavendish earnestly to apply himself more
-to religion, telling him what great comfort and support he felt from it
-now in his extremity. Tillotson and I went in the coach with him. Some
-of the crowd wept, while others insulted him; he was touched with the
-one expression, but did not seem provoked by the other. He was singing
-psalms most of the way, and said he hoped to sing better soon. Looking
-at the great crowd he said ‘I hope I shall soon see a much better
-assembly.’ He walked about the scaffold four or five times, then he
-turned to the Sheriffs, and in presenting the paper he protested his
-innocence of any design against the King’s life, or any attempt to
-subvert the Government. He prayed God to preserve the Protestant
-religion, and earnestly wished that Protestants should love one another,
-and not make way for Popery by their animosities. He forgave all his
-enemies, and died in charity with all mankind. After this he prayed
-again with Archbishop Tillotson, and more than once by himself. Then
-William Russell stood erect, arranged his dress, and, without the
-slightest change of countenance, laid his noble head upon the block,
-‘which was struck off (says Evelyn) by three butcherly strokes.’
-
-Five years afterwards when James the Second stood on the brink of ruin,
-he did not disdain to apply to the Earl of Bedford for help. ‘My Lord,’
-he said, ‘you are an honest man, and of great credit in the country, and
-can do me signal service. ‘Ah, sire,’ replied the Earl, ‘I am old and
-feeble, and can be of little use, but I once had a son who could have
-assisted you, and he is no more.’ By which answer James was so struck,
-that he could not speak for several moments.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 14. WILLIAM HARVEY, M.D.
-
- _Black gown. Black skull-cap._
-
- BORN 1578, DIED 1657-8.
-
- BY RILEY.
-
-
-SON of Thomas Harvey of Folkestone, in Kent, by Joan Hawke, and eldest
-of seven sons and two daughters. The parents were well-to-do people, who
-brought up their children carefully and respectably. Mrs. Harvey seems
-to have been a most estimable woman, if we only believe one half the
-virtues ascribed to her on the tablet in Folkestone Church, where she
-lies buried; the epitaph, though couched in the eulogistic and lengthy
-style which was the fashion of the day, is sufficiently characteristic
-to merit insertion. The mother of a great man is in our eyes always
-deserving of notice.
-
-‘She was a godly, harmless woman, a chaste, loving wife, a charitable,
-quiet neighbour, a comfortable and friendly matron, a provident
-housewife and tender mother. Elected of God, may her soul rest in heaven
-(as her body in this grave), to her a happy advantage, to hers an
-unhappy loss.’
-
-When only ten years old William Harvey went to a Grammar School, and
-subsequently to Caius College, Cambridge, where, we are told, ‘he
-studied classics, dialectics, and physics.’ It was the fashion of the
-day for young men of any standing to finish their education on the
-Continent, in one or other of those schools of learning and science
-which were indeed the resort of the youth of all nations. Harvey fixed
-his choice on Padua, then especially rich in eminent Professors in all
-branches of learning. He had been early destined, both by the wishes of
-his family and his own inclination, for the medical profession; and at
-Padua, under the auspices of the celebrated Fabricius of Acquapendente
-and others, our young Englishman, whose zeal was equal to his
-intelligence, laid the foundation of his future greatness, and made
-rapid strides in the path of fame. He remained five years at Padua, and
-before his departure, at the age of twenty-four, received his doctor’s
-diploma, with ‘licence to practise in every land and seat of learning.’
-On his return to England he obtained his doctor’s degree at his old
-University of Cambridge, after which he settled in London, and married
-the daughter of one Lancelot Brown, M.D. Harvey soon got into extensive
-practice, enlarged his connection daily, and, while rising step by step
-in his profession, made himself beloved (as is mostly the case with the
-true disciple of St. Luke) by the skill and charity he exercised among
-the poor and afflicted by whom he was surrounded.
-
-Before long he was elected a member of St. Bartholomew’s Hospital, and
-subsequently Principal Physician of that important establishment, where,
-in the course of his tenure, he introduced the most stringent reforms
-and regulations, which were considered needlessly severe by the younger
-students, who had grown into habits of laxity and idleness. But neither
-the duties of his office, nor his practice which he carried on outside
-the walls, were allowed to interfere in any way with his literary
-labours. Making the profoundest researches into every branch of medical
-science, perusing and weighing the arguments of those very writers whom
-he was destined to eclipse; he attracted the notice of King James the
-First, one of whose redeeming qualities it was to encourage learning,
-and who found great delight in the society of eminent men. The King
-named Harvey Physician Extraordinary, with a reversionary promise of the
-regular post at Court when it should become vacant, which did not occur
-till after the accession of Charles the First. He was also body
-physician to several noblemen and gentlemen of eminence, such as the
-Lord Chancellor Bacon and Thomas Howard, Earl of Arundel, with whom he
-travelled on the Continent. He was appointed Lecturer to the Royal
-College of Physicians, in Amen Corner, where, with some interruptions
-(through absence, Court duties, and other hindrances), he continued for
-many years to attract and interest his colleagues by his knowledge and
-eloquence. It was in the course of these lectures that he first
-promulgated his wondrous doctrines on the motions of the heart and the
-circulation of the blood; a subject with which the name of William
-Harvey is indissolubly connected. The theories that had been hatching in
-his prolific mind for long now took form and shape in his immortal work,
-which he dedicated to King Charles, and to his own College. It was this
-work (although one of many) which enriched the science of medicine, and
-rendered his name immortal. The circulation of the blood had from time
-immemorial been the theme of dispute and discussion among men of all
-nations; but it was reserved, says Birch, for William Harvey in 1628 to
-publish a book which was the clearest, the shortest, and the most
-convincing that had ever yet been written on the subject. The startling
-discoveries, and the bold manner in which they were expounded, kindled a
-flame of antagonism and rivalry in the medical world. Learned
-Professors, and men who professed without learning, rose to denounce, to
-question, to deny him even the merit of originality, for had not the
-same theories been known to the ancients? To the manifold attacks by
-which he was assailed Harvey maintained for the most part a dignified
-silence, though compelled in some cases to rise up and defend himself
-and his opinions from adversaries, both English and foreign.
-
-In 1636 he accompanied his friend and patron, Thomas Howard, Earl of
-Arundel, when that nobleman went on a special mission to the Emperor of
-Germany. Harvey did not neglect this opportunity of making the
-acquaintance of all the eminent men of science in the country, who in
-their turn were desirous (from mingled motives) of meeting a man with
-whose name Europe was now ringing. In a conclave of medical men at
-Nürnberg our doctor made a public declaration of his professional faith,
-when he was met by the most strenuous opposition. The learned Caspar
-Hoffman, in particular, was so violent and unreasonable in his
-arguments, that William Harvey, after listening with singular
-forbearance for a considerable time, laid down the scalpel, which he
-held and quietly left the apartment. It was in this expedition with Lord
-Arundel that one of his Excellency’s gentlemen told Aubrey that Lord
-Arundel was rendered very anxious by the frequent explorings of his
-physician into the woods, where was great fear, not only of wild beasts,
-but also of thieves, and where, indeed, the doctor one time narrowly
-escaped with life. But Harvey would not neglect the chance of studying
-the strange trees and foreign plants, and adding to his collection of
-toads, frogs, and the like, for the purpose of experimenting upon
-them—was sometimes like to be lost indeed, so that my Lord Ambassador
-was angry with him. With all these contentions and animadversions we are
-not surprised to hear that at one time Harvey’s practice declined, and
-Aubrey says, ‘He was treated by many as a visionary and a madman, and
-though everybody admired his anatomy, most people questioned his
-therapeutics, so much so that his bills (_i.e._ recipes and
-prescriptions) were not worth threepence.’ He now gave himself up to the
-prosecution of his Court duties, and was indefatigable in his attendance
-on the King. The relationship between Charles and his physician was of
-the most friendly and intimate nature. Harvey speaks of his royal master
-in terms of true affection, while the King took great delight in
-frequenting the doctor’s dissecting-room, and studying anatomy and
-medicine under his tutelage. On the breaking out of the civil wars
-Harvey became more than ever attached in every sense of the word to the
-person of the King, following him wheresoever he went, to court and
-camp. On their return from Scotland our peace-loving doctor was present
-at the battle of Edgehill, where Aubrey records a very characteristic,
-and almost comical adventure. It was in 1642, during the fight in
-question, that Harvey was intrusted with the care of the Prince of Wales
-and the Duke of York. He accordingly withdrew with his young charges to
-what he considered the shelter of a hedge, and finding the time hang
-heavy on his hands, he took a book from his pocket, which he began
-calmly and leisurely to peruse, when a large bullet grazed and disturbed
-the grass at his feet, and induced him to move further from the heat of
-the battle. Again we quote Aubrey, who met him at Oxford, where the
-Court then was, and though ‘too young to become acquainted with so
-learned a doctor,’ yet he remembers well how Harvey would come to our
-College to the chambers of George Bathurst, tutor, who kept hens for the
-hatching purposes in his rooms. Harvey would break the eggs daily at
-intervals in order to watch the different progress of formation towards
-the ‘perfect chick’; and all this with a view to the medical works he
-was writing. How widely at variance were these calm studies compared
-with the wild turmoil of political and military excitement by which he
-was surrounded! The Wardenship of Merton College becoming vacant by the
-resignation of Sir Matthew Brent, a Parliamentarian, the King
-recommended Harvey for the vacant post, which he obtained, but did not
-enjoy long, for when Oxford surrendered to the Roundheads, Brent resumed
-his office. We cannot be surprised to hear that so loyal a subject as
-Harvey incurred the ire of Cromwell, and on the doctor’s return to
-London he found his house sacked, the furniture destroyed, and, worse
-than all, as he himself told Aubrey, ‘No griefe was so crucifyinge as
-the loss of those papers (treating of his medical experiences and
-experiments) which neither love nor money could replace.’ It must have
-been about the year 1646 that Dr. Harvey made up his mind to resign his
-place at Court. Many reasons were given for this step, many apologies
-made for his forsaking his royal master; but he was near upon seventy,
-and it appears natural that a man of so peaceful a nature and of such
-studious taste should prefer a calmer existence than that of ‘following
-the drum.’ His retirement not only enabled him to pursue the bent of his
-inclinations and to indulge in contemplation, but also to enjoy the
-society of his brothers, who were of that number that verily dwelt
-together in unity. They held their elder in honour and affection, and
-vied with each other in welcoming him warmly to their respective homes.
-His next brother Eliab seems to have been his favourite, as he made his
-home for the most part either at the said Eliab’s London residence of
-Cokaine House, near the Poultry, or at Roehampton, in Surrey. On the
-leads of the former dwelling the doctor was wont to pass many hours in
-contemplation, arranging his different stations with a view to the sun
-and wind. At Combe there were caverns specially constructed in the
-garden for the physician to meditate, as he always found darkness most
-conducive to thought. The thrifty Eliab took William’s financial affairs
-in hand, which he conducted with so much energy and discernment as to
-increase his brother’s income, and enable him to indulge his generous
-propensities towards private individuals and public institutions. He
-became a munificent benefactor to his beloved College of Physicians,
-both by gifts in his lifetime, and bequest by testament. He enlarged the
-buildings, added a wing, and a large hall for conference, endowed it
-with a library and a museum, and, in fact, was so noble in his gifts
-that the grateful College erected a statue in his honour, with a long
-and flattering inscription. But, alas! all these valuable additions,
-together with the whole edifice, were destroyed in the Great Fire of
-London. At the age of seventy-one the doctor’s energy remained so
-unabated, that not only did he continue his literary labours, but he
-travelled to Italy with his friend and disciple Sir George Brent. On the
-last day of June 1657 William Harvey was stricken with the palsy, and,
-on endeavouring to speak, found that he had lost the power to do so. He
-ordered his apothecary by signs to ‘lett him blood,’ but this gave him
-no relief, and his professional knowledge warned him that the end was
-approaching. He therefore sent for his brother and nephews, to whom he
-himself delivered some little token of affection, a watch or what not,
-bidding them tenderly farewell, with dumb but eloquent signs of
-affection. He died the same day as he was stricken. His friend Aubrey
-exonerates him from the false charge of having hastened his own death by
-drinking opium, which he occasionally used as an alleviation of pain,
-but said Harvey had ‘an easy passport.’
-
-A long train of his colleagues from the Royal College attended his
-funeral, and Aubrey himself was one of the bearers. He was buried at
-Hempstead, in Essex, and was ‘lapped’ in a leaden case, which was shaped
-in form of the body, with a label bearing the illustrious name of
-William Harvey, M.D., on his breast.
-
-The last will and testament of men who lay claim to any celebrity appear
-to us to merit notice as indicative of character. Harvey’s will did not
-in any way belie his life. He left his faithful steward and brother,
-Eliab Harvey, the bulk of his property in money and land, as likewise
-(Aubrey thinks out of tender sentiment) his silver coffee-pot; for the
-brothers were wont to drink coffee together at a time when it was
-reckoned an uncommon luxury, before coffee-houses were prevalent in
-England. To all his other relations he left small sums that they might
-purchase remembrances; to his College, and to more than one hospital,
-generous bequests; scarcely any one was forgotten. To his dear and
-learned friend Mr. Thomas Hobbes £10, to Dr. Scarborough his velvet
-embroidered gown, to another his case of silver-mounted surgical
-instruments, and so on. Nor were his faithful servants, who had tended
-him in sickness, forgotten; ‘the pretty young wench’ who waited on him
-at Oxford, and to whom Aubrey alludes in jesting terms, in spite of
-Harvey’s proverbial insensibility to female charms, proved a most tender
-nurse, and was gratefully remembered. We hear very little at any time
-about Mistress Harvey, or the esteem in which her husband held her, but
-we are told she had a parrot, whose prattle much amused the learned
-doctor.
-
-He corresponded with learned men, both at home and abroad, and was
-linked in friendship with such men as Hobbes, Robert Boyle, Cowley, and
-the like. By nature he was hot-tempered and outspoken, although a
-courtier. He rode to visit his patients on horseback, with a servant to
-follow him on foot—‘a decent custom,’ Aubrey thinks, the discontinuance
-of which he regrets. The same authority says Harvey ‘was of the lowest
-stature, and an olivaster complexion, like unto wainscott; little eye,
-round, bright, and black, and hair like the raven, but quite white
-before his death,’ which could scarcely be wondered at, as he was then
-eighty years of age. His friend, the learned Mr. Hobbes, says that
-Harvey was ‘the only man, perhaps, who ever lived to see his own
-doctrines established in his lifetime.’ This statement, the truth of
-which appears more than questionable, it is easy to imagine, was put
-forth under the influence of mortified feeling on the part of the
-‘philosopher of Malmesbury.’ We refer the reader who is curious in such
-research to the catalogues of the principal scientific libraries, both
-in England and on the Continent, for a list of this great physician’s
-professional works, as their names alone would enlarge in an
-inconvenient manner the bulk of our volume.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 15. THE HONOURABLE EDWARD RUSSELL.
-
- _In armour. Red sash over right shoulder. White collar, with tassels.
- Long hair._
-
- DIED 1665.
-
- BY REMÉE.
-
-
-HE was the youngest son of Francis, fourth Earl of Bedford, by Catherine
-Brydges. He married Penelope, daughter and co-heir of Sir Moses Hill of
-Hillsborough Castle, Ireland (Knight Marshal of Ulster, and ancestor of
-the present Marquis of Downshire), and widow of Sir William Brooke,
-Knight, by whom he had five sons and daughters. His second son was
-eventually raised to the Peerage by the title of the Earl of Oxford.
-Edward Russell survived his wife, and, dying in 1665, was buried at
-Chenies.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 16. WILLIAM RUSSELL, FIFTH EARL, FIRST DUKE OF BEDFORD.
-
- _In armour. Lace cravat. Wig._
-
- BORN 1613, DIED 1700.
-
- BY SIR GODFREY KNELLER.
-
-
-HE was the eldest son of Francis Russell, fourth Earl of Bedford, by
-Catherine Brydges, daughter and co-heir of Lord Chandos. He was educated
-at Magdalen College, Oxford; and after travelling abroad for two years,
-we are told he returned home in 1634, a very handsome and accomplished
-gentleman. Of his personal beauty and noble bearing the fine portrait of
-William Russell, and Lord Digby, by Vandyck, bears undoubted testimony.
-He had been created Knight of the Bath at the coronation of Charles the
-First. The representative of a high-born family, and heir to a very
-large fortune, young Lord Russell was keenly watched by the match-makers
-of the day. At that time three rival beauties divided the admiration of
-the Court—Lady Elizabeth Cecil, Lady Dorothy Sidney, and Lady Anne Carr,
-the only child of the Earl and Countess of Somerset. She was born in the
-Tower at the time of her mother’s imprisonment for the murder of Sir
-Thomas Overbury, and had been brought up in total ignorance of her
-parents’ ignominy. ‘The voice goes,’ says a contemporary writer, ‘that
-young Russell bends somewhat towards the Lady Anne Carr.’ One would not
-be surprised to hear that Lord Bedford was most adverse to the union. He
-trembled for the future welfare of his son, and the honour of his house,
-for heavy was the blot on the young lady’s ‘scutcheon. He promised his
-consent to any other union his son should project; but it was too late:
-Lord Russell’s choice was free no more, and the sequel proved the
-selection had been for his own happiness, and that of the whole family.
-The King interested himself in the cause of the young lovers, and sent
-the Duke of Lennox to mediate with Lord Bedford in the matter. Lord
-Somerset, with all his crimes on his head, had proved himself the most
-tender and devoted of fathers, giving his child an excellent and
-strictly virtuous education, and he made every sacrifice in his power to
-give her a good dowry, seeing that her poverty was an additional
-obstacle to the marriage in Lord Bedford’s eyes; so Somerset sold his
-house at Chiswick, his furniture, his plate and jewels; in fact denuded
-himself of almost all he had, to make settlements on Lady Anne, ‘for,’
-said he to the Lord Chamberlain, ‘if one of us is to be undone by the
-marriage, let it be myself, rather than my own deserving child.’ And so
-came about this marriage, and the lovely creature, whose sweet innocent
-young face is familiar to all lovers of Vandyck, became the wife of Lord
-Russell, and the future mother of the patriot William.
-
-Lord Russell sat in Parliament for Tavistock, having for colleague the
-famous Mr. Pym; but in the commencement of his career he did not take
-much part in debate, but was chiefly employed in carrying messages from
-the Lower to the Upper House.
-
-The death of Francis, fourth Earl of Bedford, caused great excitement in
-political circles, and the new Earl received a deputation from the House
-of Peers expressive of condolence, and the hope that ‘as soon as his
-Lordship’s sorrow would allow him, he would take his seat, for no one
-could better supply the place of his deceased father.’ These conjectures
-were confirmed, for the new Lord followed in the footsteps of his
-father, and in all the part he took in the coming struggles, he was ever
-ready to support liberal and enlightened views, and to advocate what he
-considered necessary reforms; withstanding undue encroachments on the
-part of the King. He was, however, inclined to wise and moderate views
-from the beginning, and deeply regretted the circumstances which had led
-to civil dissension and open war; but the times were too stormy, and the
-pressure of the political barometer too high, to allow of a middle
-course. Disgusted with what he considered the arbitrary measures and the
-obstinacy of the King, Lord Bedford now espoused the cause of the
-Parliament, and even accepted the post of General in their army. He
-besieged the Royalist forces in Sherborne Castle, and afterwards, on
-joining the Earl of Essex on the eve of the battle of Edgehill, he
-accepted, under that general, the command of the _corps de reserve_. His
-conduct in the action gained him great distinction, as it was supposed
-to be owing to his skill and courage that the defeat of the
-Parliamentarians was averted, ‘for Lord Bedford brought up very
-gallantly amidst a play of cannon.’ He was ever ready to propose and to
-facilitate every means of pacification between Charles and his people,
-but all these endeavours proving fruitless, and finding himself in
-opposition to the _ultra_ opinions and measures of the Roundheads, he,
-with some other Lords, determined on joining the King at Oxford. One of
-his biographers says, the Earl of Bedford came to Oxford, had his
-introduction, made a declaration of the motives which had actuated his
-past conduct, and received a formal pardon under the Great Seal. The
-King was naturally inclined to welcome so noble an adherent, but was
-rather lukewarm in his manner, while the Queen and the greater part of
-the courtiers treated him with much discourtesy. He fought with the
-Royalists at the siege of Gloucester and the battle of Newbury, where
-the gallant Falkland was killed. The Parliament, infuriated at Lord
-Bedford’s secession, sequestrated his estates; but this sentence was
-reversed shortly after the battle of Marston Moor in 1644. The next year
-Lord Bedford, with Lord Carlisle and four other Peers, who had come from
-the King’s quarters, went to the House of Parliament and took the
-Covenant before the Commissioners of the Great Seal; this being the only
-compliance made by Lord Bedford with the faction he had abandoned. He
-now retired from public life, absented himself from Parliament, and
-sought that quiet and domestic peace in the bosom of his family, for
-which it may be well imagined he had often sighed amid the turmoil and
-strife of political and military life. He repaired to his home at Woburn
-Abbey, where, between the years 1645 and 1647, his royal master visited
-him on three separate occasions. After the execution of the King, and
-during the vicissitudes of the Commonwealth and the Protectorate, Lord
-Bedford continued to live in seclusion, and it was not until the
-Restoration (to which event he contributed, as far as in him lay, both
-by his influence and his aid in pecuniary matters) that he reappeared in
-public. How ill was he repaid by an ungrateful and cruel King! Lord
-Bedford carried St. Edward’s sceptre at the coronation of Charles the
-Second, and some time after received the Blue Ribbon of the Garter. He
-belonged to a large number of loyal spirits, who, after assisting and
-rejoicing in the return of the lawful Sovereign, experienced the most
-bitter disappointment at the tyrannical and unconstitutional course
-pursued by Charles, and following in the steps of his father, stood up
-manfully against the encroachments on civil and religious liberty;
-conduct which was supported and nobly carried out in the House of
-Commons by his son William, Lord Russell, whose union with Lady Vaughan
-about 1669 (better known to history as Rachel, Lady Russell) was a
-source of unalloyed satisfaction to Lord and Lady Bedford, to whom she
-became a tender and devoted daughter. In the life of William, Lord
-Russell, we have given full details of his political career, of the
-animosity his independent line of conduct aroused in the minds of the
-King and the Duke of York, of his arrest on the false pretence of being
-implicated in the Rye House Plot, of his unjust trial and hurried
-execution, particulars of which it would be superfluous to repeat here.
-Lady Russell spent the early days of her widowhood, and indeed the
-greater part of her subsequent life, at Woburn, with her father-in-law,
-affording and imparting sympathy. Lord Russell’s execution took place in
-July 1683, and within a year his fond mother followed him to the grave.
-Since the death of that beloved son, Lady Bedford’s health had gradually
-declined; she pined away silently, almost imperceptibly; but there is
-little doubt her death was accelerated by a strange and unforeseen
-incident. She was sitting one day in the gallery at Woburn, when her
-attention was attracted by a pamphlet which contained the whole history
-of her mother’s life, her marriage and divorce from Lord Essex, and the
-tragedy connected with the murder of Sir Thomas Overbury, together with
-the complicity of both parents—the mother, whose memory she knew no
-reason to despise, the father whom she fondly believed she had every
-reason to adore. The next person who entered the room found the unhappy
-woman senseless on the floor, the fatal book beside her. It appears from
-some letters of her daughter-in-law at the time, that the family not
-only believed that this sad incident had hastened her death, but that if
-her life had been spared, her reason would have been endangered.
-
-The remainder of Lord Bedford’s life is so intimately bound up with that
-of his daughter-in-law and her children, that we must refer the reader
-to our notice of Lady Russell for further particulars, even the passage
-in which we have given the account of the creation of the Dukedom, which
-honour was doubly acceptable to the aged Duke, as a tribute to the
-memory of his lamented son. His love for his grandchildren, and the
-tender letters he writes to their mother on their account, his delight
-in the society of Mistress Katey, his little playfellow of nine years
-old, when he was past eighty, all vouch for the gentleness of heart
-which characterised the first Duke of Bedford. He had lived to see his
-son’s memory vindicated, his son’s widow honoured and sought after by
-every class in the kingdom, beginning with the Sovereigns, William and
-Mary; the attainder reversed, his grandchildren prosperous, his grandson
-and heir married with his sanction and approbation, and the family name,
-in which he had a right to glory, respected through the kingdom. He was
-ready to depart, and ‘now his daily prayer was to the effect that the
-God in whom he had so humbly and faithfully trusted would grant him an
-easy passage to the tomb.’ And never did any person leave this world
-with greater inward peace, or with less struggle and discomposure; his
-lamp of life was not blown out: the oil wasted by degrees, nature was
-spent, and he fell asleep on the 7th September 1700, aged eighty-seven.
-He was buried at Chenies by the side of his beloved wife.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 17. SIR THOMAS MYDDLETON, BART., OF CHIRK.
-
- _Brown dress. Purple sleeves. Lace cravat. Long hair._
-
- DIED 1683.
-
- BY RUSSELL.
-
-
-HE was the son of Sir Thomas Myddleton, first Baronet, who began his
-military career as a Parliamentarian, afterwards became a zealous
-adherent of the Royal cause, and was created a Baronet in 1660. The
-subject of the present notice married, first, Elizabeth, daughter and
-co-heir of Sir Thomas Wilbraham of Woodney; and, secondly, Charlotte,
-daughter of Sir Orlando Bridgeman, Bart.; and had an only daughter,
-Charlotte, married first to Edward, Earl of Warwick, and secondly to the
-Right Hon. Joseph Addison.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 18. THE HONOURABLE FRANCIS RUSSELL.
-
- _In armour. Long fair hair._
-
- DIED 1641.
-
- BY REMÉE.
-
-
-HE was the second son of Francis, fourth Earl of Bedford, by Catherine
-Brydges. He married Catherine, daughter of Lord Grey de Wark, and widow
-of Sir Edward Moseley, Bart., and of the Lord North and Gray, by whom he
-had no children. Francis Russell died in France shortly before his
-father. He was brother to the first Countess of Bradford, of the Newport
-family.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- BREAKFAST-ROOM.
-
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-
-
-
-
- BREAKFAST-ROOM.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 1. PRINCE MAURICE.
-
- _As a boy. In the character of Cupid._
-
- BORN 1620, DIED 1653.
-
- BY HONTHORST.
-
-
-HE was the fourth son of Frederic, Elector Palatine (King of Bohemia),
-by Elizabeth, Princess of England, daughter of James the First. After
-the battle of Prague, which wrecked their fortunes, the unhappy ex-King
-and Queen were driven from their palace at Prague, compelled to fly for
-their lives by unfrequented roads, and through the blinding snowstorms,
-which impeded the progress of their coach, and from which the fugitives
-were obliged to alight, and take horse.
-
-Elizabeth displayed the utmost courage and fortitude, despite the
-intensity of the weather and the delicacy of her health, and mounted
-gladly on a pillion behind a young English volunteer of the name of
-Hopton, who would often speak in after-days with love and veneration of
-his royal fellow-traveller, the Queen of Hearts, the only sovereignty
-that was now left her. In their distress the unhappy pair sought about
-for some place of shelter where Elizabeth might be cared for in her hour
-of approaching trial and her husband appealed to his brother-in-law,
-George William of Brandenburg, for the loan of one of his castles,
-either of Spandau or Custrine. The answer was a grudging permission to
-inhabit the latter residence, although the owner assured Frederic it was
-no place for a Queen just fresh from a palace; that it was not
-commodious or safe from the incursions of their enemies; and, moreover,
-they would be exposed to cold and famine, as there was no fuel and no
-food. The fugitives found this account but too true, and even this surly
-permission would have been withheld but for the intercession of the
-British Envoy, Wotton. Moreover, their parsimonious host bargained with
-his needy relatives to defray all expenses, but Elizabeth’s condition
-allowed of no alternative. Three days after their arrival Prince Maurice
-was born in this dreary old barrack, with its bare walls and unfurnished
-interior—a strange contrast to the scene of splendour and festivity
-which characterised the birth of his brother Rupert. Before the proper
-time had elapsed that it was advisable for her to travel, the ex-Queen
-was hurried away, accompanied by little Rupert, to Wolfenbüttel, and
-afterwards to the Hague, where she found a generous protector and
-devoted friend in the Stadtholder; the new-born infant being despatched
-to the care of his widowed grandmother, the Electress Juliana, in Polish
-Russia. Poor child! he had not the traditional good fortune of one born
-on Christmas Day. From his earliest childhood he bore his brother Rupert
-the most devoted affection, and through their lives they were brothers
-in very truth—brothers in arms and affection; their paths strangely
-intertwined for soldiers of fortune; they were both prematurely brave,
-and early initiated into the profession they so much adorned. When
-together at the siege of Breda, Maurice, waking in the night, heard a
-noise for which he could not account, so he roused Rupert, and they
-crept out together in the dark, and were just in time to save the
-garrison from a surprise. In 1638 Prince Maurice prosecuted his studies
-at a French University, and in 1642 gained permission to accompany
-Rupert, who had been appointed to a high command in the army of their
-uncle, Charles the First. This gallant pair vied with each other in
-loyalty and devotion to the English King. Their bravery, their exploits,
-the various commands they filled, the numerous actions in which they
-fought (frequently side by side), all these incidents belong to the
-chronicles of the civil wars of the period. In 1646 the brothers left
-England, Prince Rupert proceeding to St. Germain to join the
-Queen-mother there in exile, while Prince Maurice embarked for Holland.
-The subsequent life of this Prince appears to have been almost entirely
-passed on the decks of the varied vessels which he in turn commanded,
-for both he and Rupert secured glory and renown on the broad ocean, as
-they had already done in the battlefield, and their voyages were
-frequently made in company. In the notice of the elder, we have given
-the account of a touching episode in the lives of the two brothers,
-which we therefore omit here. But Maurice was doomed to find a watery
-grave in the year 1653, in a hurricane which overtook his vessel off the
-Virgin Islands. The following is a description of the tragic event: ‘In
-this fatal wreck, besides many great gentlemen and others, the sea, to
-glut itself, swallowed the Prince, whose fame the mouth of detraction
-cannot blast. His very enemies bewailed his loss. Many had more power,
-few more merit; he lived beloved, and died bewailed.’ Two years after
-his death there was a rumour that he still lived (but the false report
-soon died away), that he had been captured by a pirate, and was a slave
-in Africa, but this unlikely tale gained little or no credence.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 8. COLONEL WEST.
-
-_Black cloak over doublet of same colour. Left hand gloved with white
- glove and holding the other. Large white cuffs turned back. Hand
- resting on hip. White deep turned-down collar with tassels._
-
- BY WALKER.
-
-
-HE was a distinguished Parliamentarian officer, and much valued by
-Cromwell. He was engaged in Inverkeithing fight in 1651, and was
-commended in Oliver Cromwell’s letter to the Speaker of the Parliament
-of England, reporting the result of that engagement, which he described
-as an ‘unspeakable mercy.’
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 16. THOMAS WRIOTHESLEY, EARL OF SOUTHAMPTON.
-
- _Robes of the Garter. Wand of office._
-
- DIED 1667.
-
- BY SIR PETER LELY.
-
-
-HE was the second born but only surviving son of the third Earl, by
-Elizabeth, daughter of John Vernon of Hodnet, County Salop. Educated at
-Eton and Oxford, where he distinguished himself, and afterwards
-travelled abroad; remained some time in France, where he probably
-espoused his first wife, and afterwards proceeded to the Low Countries.
-His father and elder brother had also gone thither, and were attacked by
-fever. The youth died, and his father (travelling before it was prudent
-for him to do so), borne down by sorrow, soon followed his beloved child
-to the grave. Thomas, who had now become Earl of Southampton, found on
-his return to England that public affairs were in great confusion. The
-Parliamentarians did all in their power to gain over the young nobleman
-to their side, but he disapproved of their proceedings, and would take
-no part in them. He was soon after appointed Privy Councillor and Lord
-of the Bedchamber to the King, and became henceforth, in every sense of
-the word, attached to the royal person, to whom he was an excellent
-friend, often giving him unpalatable advice. He used to sleep in the
-King’s apartment, and to the best of his power soothed his hours of
-mental anguish. In 1647, when the unhappy monarch fled from Hampton
-Court, he took shelter at Titchfield, in Hampshire, Lord Southampton’s
-country-house, and when brought back to the palace in the hands of his
-enemies, his first request was for the attendance of his trusty friend.
-This permission was granted him, and Southampton was one of the last
-allowed to remain with his royal master, and one of the four mourners
-who paid the last sad duties to his remains. With Charles the Second he
-kept up a continued correspondence, and supplied the exile with large
-sums, hastening to meet him on his arrival in England, when he was
-rewarded by being made Knight of the Garter, as were other faithful
-adherents to the Crown, and was shortly afterwards appointed Lord High
-Treasurer. In this capacity he showed so much independence of spirit and
-interest in the public welfare as to offend the King, who did not,
-however, remove him from his office, which was exercised by Southampton,
-although suffering from a terrible and painful disease which made
-business occasionally irksome to him. To his credit be it spoken, that
-during seven years’ management of the Treasury he made but an ordinary
-fortune, disdaining to sell places, as many of his predecessors had
-done.
-
-The Earl of Southampton was thrice married: first, to Rachel, daughter
-of Daniel de Ruvigny, in France, by whom he had two sons, who died
-young, and three daughters, the second of whom was Rachel, the faithful
-wife and widow of the patriot, William, Lord Russell; his second
-Countess was Elizabeth, daughter and co-heir of Francis Booth, Lord
-Dunsmore, by whom he had four girls; and his third wife was the daughter
-of William, second Duke of Somerset, and widow of Viscount Molyneux. He
-died at Southampton House, in Bloomsbury, which he bequeathed to his
-daughter, Lady Russell, and was buried at Titchfield. By his death the
-title of Southampton in the Wriothesley family became extinct.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 28. COLONEL, AFTERWARDS LORD GORING.
-
- _Slashed doublet. Long fair hair._
-
- DIED 1662 _v.p._
-
- BY STONE AFTER VANDYCK.
-
-
-SIR George Goring of Hurstpierpoint, County Sussex, was created in 1629
-Baron Goring, and in 1645 Earl of Norwich. He married Mary, daughter of
-Edward Neville, Lord Abergavenny. Their third eldest son was George, the
-subject of this notice, who distinguished himself greatly in the civil
-wars. He married in early life Lady Lettice Boyle, daughter of the Earl
-of Cork. He was wild, eccentric, and extravagant, and Lord Wentworth
-(afterwards Earl of Strafford), speaking of him in a letter to Lord
-Carlisle, 1633, says: ‘Young Mr. Goring is gone to travel, having run
-himself out of £8000, which he purposes to redeem by frugality abroad,
-unless my Lord Cork can be induced to put to his helping hand, which I
-have undertaken to solicit for him the best I can, and shall do it with
-all the power and care my credit and wit shall in any way suggest unto
-me.’ The noble writer was successful in his negotiation, and Lord Cork
-was most generous and liberal on this and several other occasions to a
-son-in-law who gave him much trouble. Not long after the marriage Lord
-Cork thus writes, in speaking of George Goring: ‘After borrowing money
-from me for himself and his father, he departed from us without once
-taking leave of me, and leaving his wife and servants, posted through
-Scotland on to England on the choice gray gelding I bestowed upon him
-called Gray Brown, hath much disquieted me, his wife, and friends.’ His
-poor wife had good reason to be disquieted on this and many other
-occasions, but she seems to have retained a real affection for her
-unworthy husband, willing to join him at any summons, and frequently
-interceding with her generous father for so-called loans and large sums,
-which never appear to have been repaid.
-
-George Goring, on his arrival in the Low Countries, enlisted as a
-soldier, entered Lord Vere’s regiment, and soon gained a high command,
-distinguishing himself at the siege of Breda. On his return to England
-he was made Governor of Portsmouth, in which capacity he got into
-trouble with the Parliament, and was summoned before the House of
-Commons on suspicion of favouring the Royal cause. Anxious to provide
-for his own interests by pleasing both sides, he contrived to give
-satisfaction to the Parliament, and was therefore exonerated. Goring was
-indeed anything but straightforward in his dealings; Lord Clarendon says
-of him: ‘He could help himself with all the intimation of doubt, or
-fear, or shame, or simplicity in his face that might gain belief to a
-greater degree than I ever saw in any man, and could seem most
-confounded when he was best resolved, and to want words when they flowed
-from no man with greater power.’ He cajoled the popular party,
-corresponded secretly with the King in 1642, threw off the mask he had
-worn as adherent to the Parliament, and declared openly that he held
-Portsmouth for Charles the First. The town was besieged by sea and land,
-and surrendered after a meagre defence; Goring stipulating that he might
-be allowed to transport himself beyond the seas, which caused great
-astonishment, as also did his appointment (on his return in 1644) to the
-command of cavalry in the Royal army in Lincolnshire. He now continued
-to distinguish himself greatly in the service of the King, and was
-present in almost every action. In 1646, his father being created Earl
-of Norwich, he became Lord Goring, and held the commission of
-Lieutenant-General of several counties, in which capacity he did little
-good, setting a bad example to the troops by his irregular and immoral
-conduct. Clarendon says of him that he had a good understanding, a sharp
-wit, and keen courage, but he did not value his promise or friendship
-according to any rules of honour or integrity. ‘He loved no man so well
-but he would cozen him and expose him to ridicule.’ The same historian
-speaks of Goring’s immoderate ambition, dissimulation, and want of
-religion. He continued his vacillating line of conduct, and when in
-difficulties pleaded illness, and gained permission to go to Bath for a
-cure, but returned to active service, became a Privy Councillor, and had
-undeserved favours showered upon him by the King. His whole career was
-marked by contrasts of success and failure, courage and blundering, and
-animosity towards those who like Prince Rupert filled a high position,
-and stood well in the opinion of others. After many vicissitudes he
-resolved to leave England, and proceeded to the Netherlands, where he
-became Lieutenant-General of the Spanish army, and afterwards obtained
-the same command in Spain under Don John de Silva, who, finding that he
-was in communication with Cardinal Mazarin, had him seized at the head
-of his troops, and sent prisoner to Madrid. Writers differ as to the
-termination of this eccentric man’s career. Some say he was put to death
-in prison for treason, and others that he entered a monastery and died
-in the habit of a Dominican friar.
-
-Lord Goring had no children. Dying in the lifetime of his father, Lord
-Norwich was succeeded by his second son, Charles, who married Alice,
-daughter of Robert Leman, Esq., and widow of Sir Richard Baker, Knight,
-but having no children the titles of Norwich and Goring became extinct.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 30. PRINCE RUPERT.
-
- _In a classical dress, as Mars._
-
- BORN 1619, DIED 1682.
-
- BY HONTHORST.
-
-
-HE was the third son of Frederic, Elector Palatine, and King of Bohemia,
-by Princess Elizabeth of England, daughter of James the First. Born at
-Prague during the short-lived period of his parents’ prosperity, while
-inhabiting the Palace of the Bohemian capital. More than half a century
-had elapsed since the birth of a royal Prince at Prague, and the event
-was the occasion of great excitement and rejoicing. Persons of all
-classes were invited to have a glimpse of the royal infant, swathed in
-rich wrappings of gold and embroidery. Nobles and ladies, burghers and
-their wives, officers of state, soldiers, peasants, all flocked to the
-Palace, and clustered round the cradle of the future hero. His father
-thought well to name him Rupert, after the wise and fortunate Elector
-who, on the death of Wenceslaus, ascended the Imperial throne: and the
-ceremony of baptism was conducted on a scale of great magnificence,
-which helped not a little to drain the ill-filled coffers of Frederic
-and Elizabeth. On the other hand, donations of all kinds poured in from
-the nobles, the burghers, and their respective wives. Contributions of
-fruit and flowers were presented by the poorer population, offerings
-which were most graciously received by the gentle-hearted mother.
-
-Her two elder sons were respectively heirs to titles (alas! how empty)
-of King, and Elector Palatine. The Bohemian Ministry, willing to do
-honour to a Prince born ‘in their midst,’ bestowed on the new-born babe
-the dignity of Duke of Lithuania, which the child did not long enjoy,
-seeing that a few months after his birth the decisive battle of Prague
-was the means of driving his parents from their newly-acquired kingdom,
-penniless and homeless wanderers, compelled to solicit shelter and
-assistance from cold relatives and fickle friends.
-
-Rupert was the only one of her children who accompanied Elizabeth on her
-miserable flight from Custrin to Holland (a circumstance to which we
-have alluded in the sketch of his brother Maurice), where the ex-Queen
-with her family resided for many years, and where five children were
-born to her. Little Rupert was sent to the College at Leyden, where his
-eldest brother Henry was a student, and had already distinguished
-himself greatly. Amongst other accomplishments, Henry was an elegant
-letter-writer, and kept up a frequent correspondence with his mother. In
-one of his letters he tells how ‘dear Rupert is a most lively boy,’ and
-amused the students when he first arrived by speaking to them in
-Bohemian.
-
-A soldier at heart from his earliest childhood, Rupert did not remain
-long at Leyden, but entered the army under Henry Frederic of Nassau, and
-(Lodge tells us) was present at the siege of Thynberg, although another
-biographer places the date of his first action several years later. Be
-this as it may, in 1637 he marched with his brother, Charles Louis, who
-now called himself Elector Palatine (their father being dead), against
-the Imperialists. The gallant Lord Craven had constituted himself the
-guardian of ‘the Palatine Princes,’ and accompanied them in the
-expedition, writing frequently to their mother at the Hague, to give
-tidings of Charles and the beloved Rupert. Lord Craven had warmly
-espoused the cause of Frederic, and was now the devoted friend of the
-royal widow and her family. He and his two charges distinguished
-themselves during the siege of Lippe, but being worsted in an encounter
-with General Hatzfeldt, Charles Louis had a narrow escape of his life.
-He crossed the river in his coach, and, clinging to the shrubs and
-underwood, climbed up on the precipitous bank of the opposite shore, and
-made his way to Holland. His brother and Lord Craven were both taken
-prisoners by the Imperialists, and carried to Vienna, where they were
-lodged in the castle. With much difficulty Rupert found means to have a
-few lines conveyed to his mother, wherein, after some tender expressions
-of filial love and respect, he assured her that no power on earth should
-induce him to renounce his party, or abjure his faith. Lord Craven
-succeeded in regaining his freedom, by paying the large ransom of
-£20,000; but all attempts to procure the deliverance of Rupert proved
-unavailing. It was only at the expiration of three years, and on
-condition that he would undertake never again to bear arms against the
-Emperor, that the young Prince was set at liberty, shortly after which
-event he received an offer from his uncle, Charles the First, of the
-command of the cavalry in the Royal army, the King having unfurled his
-standard against the Parliamentarians. He was accompanied by his brother
-Maurice, whose love and admiration for his elder were unbounded; and the
-exploits of these gallant Princes in the service of their royal uncle,
-are they not written in the books of the chronicles of the civil wars of
-England?
-
-After the execution of Charles the First Rupert received a new
-commission from Charles the Second, and continued to distinguish himself
-by sea and land; went to Portugal, the Mediterranean, the French coast,
-Madeira, the Azores, etc. etc.; encountered all kinds of dangers and
-vicissitudes, reverses and successes. A more chequered life is scarcely
-on record than that of Prince Rupert.
-
-Our space is too limited to admit of any lengthened details of his
-adventures, ‘moving accidents by flood and field,’ and of all his
-‘hair-breadth ‘scapes’; but one passage in his life is too full of
-romantic interest, and so characteristic of the fraternal affection of
-the Palatine Princes, to be passed over in silence. Captain Fearnes, who
-commanded the fine ship _The Admiral_, gives a noble and touching
-description of the incidents connected with the wreck of his vessel. One
-of the most disastrous tempests ever recorded in a seaman’s log overtook
-the English fleet, then cruising among the Western Islands, and after
-every endeavour had been made to save the ship without a chance of
-success, Captain Fearnes, who survived the wreck, gives the following
-report: ‘It was resolved that the ship must be our grave, and every man
-very well resolved to die, and the minister told us that as many as
-would receive the Sacrament he would administer it, and desired that we
-would give him notice, when we saw we were past all hope, to come to the
-place appointed, there to receive it, and die all together.’
-
-Prince Rupert, believing his last moments were at hand, waved his
-brother Maurice to bring his vessel, _The Honest_ _Seaman_, under the
-Admiral’s stern, to bid his beloved brother an eternal farewell, to give
-him his last directions and express his last wishes. Maurice, regardless
-of his own safety, commanded his men to lower a boat, either to save
-Rupert, or to put him on board and let them die together. His officers
-refused, as they said it would be to their own destruction, and be of no
-avail in saving Rupert. They made, indeed, a feint of lowering the boat,
-but paid little heed to the agony of their commander. Then the crew of
-_The Admiral_ came to a noble decision. Deeply touched by the devotion
-which his Highness displayed, they conjured him to seek safety in the
-one little boat that was left them. This he steadily refused, saying
-‘that as they had run all risks with him, so he would participate them.’
-Thus did either try to breathe their last in unspeakable magnanimity.
-The brave seamen were not to be foiled; they elected a crew of undaunted
-lads, hoisted out their boat, and by force thrust their brave Prince
-into the same. He was put aboard _The Honest Seaman_, and immediately
-sent back the skiff to save as many as was possible, specifying the
-names of three officers, one of whom alone (and that the captain in
-command) accepted the offer. Fearnes was blamed by many for deserting
-his ship’s company. He and the Prince’s servant were boarded on one of
-the vessels, but the unfortunate little skiff was swamped. The Prince
-strove in vain to approach _The Admiral_, but it could not be done from
-stress of weather, and the doomed crew waved a sad farewell from the
-deck of the sinking ship to their comrades. In all, 333 men perished in
-this fatal storm, but the whole story remains a glorious passage in the
-annals of British seamen. Rupert’s regret for the loss of a noble ship,
-with a rich freight on board, was little in comparison with his grief
-for that of his valued messmates. He was again threatened with a watery
-grave in a tremendous hurricane which overtook the fleet when at a short
-distance from the Virgin Islands, and in this fatal storm he had to
-deplore the loss of his devoted friend and brother, Prince Maurice, who
-went down on the deck of the well-named _Honest Seaman_. Yet once more
-he had an escape from drowning when at Paris at the Court of Louis the
-Fourteenth, in company with Charles the Second. A letter from a
-Roundhead thus details the circumstance:—
-
-‘The Seine had like to have made an end of your Black Prince Rupert’ (he
-was swimming with the King and Duke of York); ‘he was near being drowned
-if it had not been for the help of one of his servants, who dragged him
-up by the hair of his head.’ These ‘highly liveried blackamoors,’ like
-all other dependants of the Prince, were much attached to their noble
-master.
-
-On his return to England in 1662 Rupert seems to have given himself up
-to the pursuit of philosophical and scientific studies, even (so it was
-affirmed by many) to those of an occult nature. He fitted up for himself
-a workshop in the High Tower of Windsor Castle, furnished with forges,
-crucibles, retorts, instruments of all sorts, and here ‘the hero of a
-hundred fights’ might be seen with blacksmith’s apron and bare brawny
-arms indulging in all the experiments of vital interest to a chemist and
-an alchemist. In this laboratory he was frequently visited by his royal
-cousin the King, and his favourite the Duke of Buckingham, both of whom
-took a great delight in Rupert’s occupations. This strange man had other
-apartments assigned to him in the castle, where he kept stores of armour
-and weapons from all parts of the world, together with a library of
-valuable books, the catalogue of which is still extant. John Evelyn was
-a great admirer of Rupert’s versatile talents, and was a delighted
-listener when the Prince related to him the discovery that he had made
-of mezzotint engraving. The story is well known how on one occasion,
-when at Brussels, the Prince observed a sentinel at some distance from
-his post very busy doing something to his piece. Rupert asked what he
-was about; he replied the dew had fallen in the night, had made his
-fusil rusty, and that he was scraping and cleaning it. The Prince,
-examining the gun, was struck with something like a figure eaten into
-the barrel with innumerable little holes closed together like friezed
-work on gold or silver, part of which the soldier had scraped away. This
-suggested to the Prince a contrivance which resulted in the discovery of
-mezzotint engraving, carried out in company with his protégé, the
-painter, Wallerant Vaillant. Great rivalry was excited on the occasion,
-and many people laid claim to an invention which was clearly that of
-Rupert.
-
-Other discoveries and inventions of this wonderful man we leave to his
-more complete biographers. He found time in the midst of these
-engrossing pursuits to become enamoured of the charms of Francisca Bard,
-daughter of Lord Bellamont, by whom he had a son, on whose education he
-bestowed much care. He was called Dudley Bard, and grew up to emulate
-his father’s military ardour and undaunted courage, but was killed at
-the siege of Buda in 1686, having just attained his twentieth year.
-
-Negotiations were carried on at one time for an alliance between Rupert
-and a member of a royal house, but came to an end in consequence of the
-Prince’s slender means.
-
-In 1660 he once more embarked to oppose the French, alternating his
-beloved studies with his military and naval duties, but an old wound he
-had received in the head some time before put him to great torture and
-endangered his life, so much so that he was obliged to be trepanned.
-Requiring rest after the operation, he joined the Merry Monarch’s merry
-Court at Tunbridge Wells, and had not long been there before he formed a
-connection with the fair Mistress Hughes, an actress belonging to the
-King’s company, and one of the earliest female performers, who began her
-theatrical career in 1663, and gained great distinction in the character
-of Desdemona. The fascinations of this lady had a softening and refining
-influence on the manners and habits of his Highness, and even his
-beloved studies were neglected for the delights of her society. His
-dress was no longer neglected, and he vied with the other courtiers of
-his royal cousin in gallantry and compliments, but the beautiful
-comedian was not so easy of access as most of her compeers, and it was
-some time before she was induced to listen to her royal lover’s suit. He
-was most lavish in his expenditure, grudging nothing to the fair siren.
-He purchased for her the magnificent seat of Sir Nicholas Crispe, near
-Hammersmith, afterwards the residence of the Margrave of Brandenburg,
-which cost £25,000 in the building.
-
-By her he had a daughter named Ruperta, married to General Howe, of whom
-there is a most characteristic portrait in the collection of the Earl of
-Sandwich at Hinchingbrook. Mrs. Hughes remained on the stage for many
-years after Prince Rupert’s death, who saw little of her in his later
-days, but bequeathed a large property to her and her daughter.
-
-After leaving Tunbridge Wells he returned to Windsor, and resumed his
-studies, until called once more into active service. In 1673 he was
-appointed Lord High Admiral in place of the Duke of York, and commanded
-the fleet against the United Provinces, when, as usual, he distinguished
-himself. On the 29th of November 1682 Prince Rupert died in his house at
-Spring Gardens, ‘mourned and respected’ by men of the most differing
-interests. A magnificent funeral was allotted to him, and he was buried
-in Westminster Abbey.
-
-Count Grammont, in his Memoirs, gives anything but a flattering
-description of the Prince’s personal appearance, but we are more
-inclined to credit the testimony of such painters as Honthorst, Lely,
-and Kneller, whose portraits are undoubtedly noble and prepossessing.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 33. LADY DIANA RUSSELL AS A CHILD.
-
- _Elizabethan ruff. Elaborate lace head-dress. Rich frock. Coral
- and bells. Holds a pack of cards._
-
- DIED 1701.
-
-
-SHE was the second daughter of William, fifth Earl (afterwards first
-Duke) of Bedford. At an early age she gave much anxiety to her family,
-from having, it is said, eaten some poisonous berries, which caused the
-death of her sister Anne. Diana recovered, and married, in 1667, Sir
-Greville Verney of Compton Verney, County Warwick; and secondly,
-William, third Baron Allington of Wymondley and Killard, of Horseheath,
-County Cambridge, Constable of the Tower. Lady Allington appears to have
-taken a keen interest in the passing events of the day, especially in
-the Revolution of 1688. She is often mentioned in terms of genuine
-affection by Rachel, Lady Russell, in her letters.
-
-
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-
- DRAWING-ROOM.
-
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-
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-
- DRAWING-ROOM.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 1. LADY ISABELLA DORMER, AFTERWARDS COUNTESS OF MOUNTRATH, AS A
- CHILD.
-
- _Tawny dress. Blue drapery. Fastening up a flower._
-
- BY SIR PETER LELY.
-
-She was the second daughter of Charles, third Lord Dormer, and second
-and last Earl of Carnarvon (of that family), by Elizabeth, daughter of
-Arthur, Lord Capel. She married Sir Charles Coote, fourth Earl of
-Mountrath, of a noble family of French extraction, which settled first
-in Devonshire, and subsequently in Ireland. Sir Charles Coote, for his
-loyalty and military services, was, at the Restoration, created, with
-other honours, Earl of Mountrath. It was his grandson, and third Earl of
-Mountrath, who married the subject of this notice. He was much
-considered at Court, carried the banner of Ireland at the funeral of
-Queen Mary in 1694, was one of the Lords Justices in 1696, and died in
-1709. His grandson, the sixth Earl, married Lady Diana Newport, daughter
-of the Earl of Bradford.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 2. LADY DIANA FEILDING.
-
- _Oval. Blue dress. Dark hair._
-
- DIED 1731.
-
- BY SIR PETER LELY.
-
-She was the daughter of Francis Newport, first Earl of Bradford, by Lady
-Diana Russell. She married, first, Thomas Howard of Ashtead, County
-Surrey, Esq., Knight of the Bath, Groom of the Bedchamber to George the
-First, Auditor of the Exchequer, and Clerk Comptroller of the Board of
-Green Cloth, by whom she had a son, who died while a schoolboy at
-Westminster, and a daughter married to Lord Dudley and Ward. By her
-second husband, the Honourable William Feilding, younger son of William,
-fifth Earl of Denbigh, and second Earl of Desmond (whom she also
-survived), she left no children. A marble tablet, surmounted by a bust,
-at Ashtead, where she lies buried, bears this inscription: ‘Be this
-monument sacred to the memory of Lady Diana Feilding, daughter of
-Francis Newport, first Earl of Bradford. Her first husband was grandson
-to the Earl of Berkshire. Surviving her children, this illustrious
-branch of the house of Howard became her family. To it during her life
-she assured the inheritance of that estate she enjoyed by the bounty of
-her first husband, and at her death she made provision still more ample
-to support the honour and dignity of the present Earl of Berkshire and
-his descendants. That his gratitude therefore may be preserved in the
-minds of his latest posterity, Henry Bowes, Earl of Berkshire, has
-caused this monument to be erected, 1773.’ Lady Diana was very
-charitable to the poor, and built and endowed alms-houses for six poor
-widows in the neighbourhood of Leatherhead.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 3. LADY DIANA RUSSELL.
-
- _Oval. Blue velvet gown. Pearl necklace. Fair curls._
-
- BORN 1622, DIED 1694.
-
- BY VERELST.
-
-
-SHE was the youngest daughter of Francis William, son of William, Lord
-Russell of Thornhaugh, County North Hants, who succeeded his cousin
-Edward, as fourth Earl of Bedford. Her mother was Catherine, daughter
-and co-heir of Giles Bridges, Lord Chandos. Lady Diana married Francis,
-Viscount Newport (afterwards first Earl of Bradford), a distinguished
-loyalist, and brave soldier in Charles the First’s army. He was taken
-prisoner at Oswestry in 1644, at which time his wife (with Lady
-D’Aubigny and others) also fell into the hands of the rebels, as appears
-by a letter from the famous Hugh Peters to the Earl of Stamford,
-soliciting the release of Lady Newport. She died in 1694, and was
-interred at Chenies, the burial-place of the Russell family in
-Buckinghamshire.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 4. PORTRAIT OF A LADY. UNKNOWN.
-
- _Dark blue dress. Seated, leaning her arm on a boulder. Landscape in the
- background._
-
- BY SIR PETER LELY.
-
-
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-
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- LIBRARY.
-
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-
- No. 1. HONOURABLE ORLANDO BRIDGEMAN, GRENADIER GUARDS.
-
- _Undress. Guard’s uniform._
-
- BORN 1794, DIED 1827.
-
- BY SIR GEORGE HAYTER.
-
-
-HE was the third son of the first Earl of Bradford by the Hon. Lucy
-Byng. Was in the Grenadier Guards, and wounded at the battle of
-Waterloo, and at first reported dead. He married, in 1817, Lady Selina
-Needham, daughter of Francis, first Earl of Kilmorey, by whom he had
-three children.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 2. CAPTAIN THE HONOURABLE CHARLES ORLANDO BRIDGEMAN, R.N.
-
- _Naval uniform. Holding a telescope._
-
- BORN 1791, DIED 1860.
-
- BY SIR GEORGE HAYTER.
-
-
-HE was the second son of Orlando, first Earl of Bradford (of the
-Bridgeman family), by Lucy Elizabeth Byng, daughter of George, fourth
-Viscount Torrington. He entered the Navy in 1804 as first-class
-volunteer, on board the _Repulse_, Captain the Honourable Arthur Legge,
-under whom the following year he became Midshipman, and was present at
-Sir Robert Calder’s action at the Passage of the Dardanelles, and also
-in the Expedition of the Scheldt. In 1809 he joined the _Manilla_, 36,
-Captain George Francis Seymour (grandfather to the present Marquis of
-Hertford, 1885); in 1810 he was confirmed Lieutenant in the _Semiramis_,
-both on the Lisbon station. He was subsequently appointed
-Flag-Lieutenant to his old Commander, Rear-Admiral Legge, under whose
-orders he had first sailed. Charles Bridgeman was present at the defence
-of Cadiz, and joined successively the _Bellerophon_, hoisting the flag
-of Sir Richard Keats, on the Newfoundland station, and the _Royal
-Sovereign_, yacht, Captain Sir John Poer Beresford. For two years he
-then commanded the _Badger_, in the West Indies station, and assisted in
-the reduction of Guadaloupe, and later on was appointed to the _Icarus_,
-in South America, and the _Ruttenheimer_, which was attached to the
-squadron in the Mediterranean.
-
-Charles Bridgeman retired from active service in 1846, attaining the
-rank of Vice-Admiral before his death. He married, in 1819, Elizabeth
-Anne, daughter of Sir Henry Chamberlain, British Consul at Rio Janeiro,
-by whom he had a family of three sons and five daughters. Charles
-Bridgeman was remarkable for his personal beauty, and was deservedly
-popular in the service.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 3. THE HONOURABLE SELINA FORESTER, PRESENT COUNTESS OF BRADFORD.
-
- _Black gown. Small dog in her lap._
-
- BY FRANCIS GRANT, AFTERWARDS SIR FRANCIS GRANT, P.R.A.
-
-
-THE youngest of the five beautiful daughters of the first Baron
-Forester, by Lady Katherine Manners, second daughter of the fourth Duke
-of Rutland. She married, in 1844, Viscount Newport, who succeeded his
-father as third and present Earl of Bradford, by whom she had four sons
-and two daughters.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 4. PORTRAIT, SAID TO BE KING RICHARD THE THIRD.
-
- PAINTER UNKNOWN.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 5. ROBERT JENKINSON, SECOND EARL OF LIVERPOOL, K.G.
-
- _Dark coat. White waistcoat._
-
- BORN 1770, DIED 1828.
-
- BY SIR GEORGE HAYTER.
-
-
-BEGAN his education at a school at Parsons-green, where he remained till
-he was thirteen, and was then removed to the Charterhouse, where he
-continued for two or three years, and distinguished himself in classics
-and other branches of learning. He afterwards entered Christ Church
-College, Oxford, but his father had early destined him for public life,
-and directed Robert’s studies with a view to his future career, making a
-point that political science, commerce, and finance should be especially
-attended to. At college young Jenkinson became the companion and friend
-of George Canning, afterwards Prime Minister, a friendship which
-continued for a very long period. Robert Jenkinson was at Paris on the
-breaking out of the Revolution, and witnessed the demolition of the
-Bastille by the mob: he was the means of affording useful information to
-the British Government respecting the state of French public affairs,
-being in close correspondence with Mr. Pitt. On his return to England he
-was chosen Member of Parliament for Rye, under the especial patronage of
-the Minister. But his election taking place twelve months before his age
-qualified him to sit in the House of Commons, he passed the intervening
-time in Paris. In 1791, on attaining his twenty-first year, he took his
-seat, and made his first speech in opposition to a motion of Mr.
-Whitbread’s on foreign affairs, in which the young member showed a
-wonderful acquaintance with European politics and international law.
-Both he and his father were opposed to the Abolition of the Slave-trade.
-When in 1792 Charles Fox moved an address to the King to the effect that
-his Majesty should send an Ambassador to the French Republic (Lord Gower
-having been recalled), Mr. Jenkinson, in the absence of Mr. Pitt,
-replied in indignant and eloquent terms: ‘On this very day, while we are
-here debating about sending an Ambassador to Paris—on this very day is
-the King of France to receive sentence; and in all probability it is the
-day of his murder.’ And he proceeded in glowing terms to point out how
-ill-advised, undignified, and unfeeling the sanction which would thus be
-given to ‘sanguinary monsters’ would appear in the sight of all men.
-Fox’s motion was rejected without a division, and Jenkinson’s eloquence
-gained him universal praise, Edmund Burke being loud in his approbation.
-The young member rose in the opinion of all parties from that moment,
-and continued to take a prominent part as an upholder of the Government,
-which course he pursued for several years. In 1793 he was appointed one
-of the Commissioners of the India Board: he invariably distinguished
-himself, especially when speaking on matters connected with trade and
-commerce, for which, Mr. Sheridan said, ‘Mr. Jenkinson might be expected
-to have some claims to hereditary knowledge.’ In 1796 Robert’s father
-was created Earl of Liverpool, and he himself assumed the title of Lord
-Hawkesbury. He was a staunch advocate for the union with Ireland, and in
-1801 he became Foreign Secretary, on the formation of a new Ministry,
-which gave him ample scope for his knowledge of political affairs on the
-Continent; and in the fulfilment of his official duties, he gained new
-laurels on many occasions too numerous to detail here. Later on, the
-management of the House of Commons (as it is technically called)
-devolved upon Lord Hawkesbury, who spoke on all the important questions
-of the day, and, at the opening of the next session, was called up to
-the House of Lords in order to strengthen the Ministry in the Upper
-House. On the return of Mr. Pitt at the head of the Ministry, he
-received the seals of the Home Department. At a late period of this
-session, on Mr. Wilberforce again bringing forward his favourite
-question of the Abolition of the Slave-trade, Lord Hawkesbury was
-instrumental in opposing the measure in the House of Lords, after it had
-passed the Commons, a course which he also pursued with regard to the
-Emancipation of the Roman Catholics of Ireland, advocated by Lord
-Grenville. On the death of Mr. Pitt in 1806, the King sent for Lord
-Hawkesbury to form a new Ministry, an offer which he deemed it advisable
-to decline, accepting, however, the office of Warden of the Cinque
-Ports. He afterwards resumed his old post as Home Secretary, and, his
-father dying in 1808, he succeeded to the Earldom of Liverpool. He
-warmly advocated the cause of Spain, and was selected to move the thanks
-of the House of Lords to Lord Wellington for his gallantry in the
-Peninsula. After the assassination of Mr. Perceval in 1812, Lord
-Liverpool was prevailed upon, after frequent refusals, to accept the
-office of Prime Minister, and during his long administration, which
-lasted from 1812 to 1827, many of the questions of the deepest
-importance connected with home and foreign politics were brought under
-the notice of the Government. Lord Liverpool never slackened in his
-attention to public affairs, whatever difference of opinion may have
-existed then, or subsequently as to the liberality of his opinions. The
-last occasion on which Lord Liverpool was seen at his post was on the
-15th of February 1827, when he moved an address expressing the
-willingness of the House to make an additional provision for the Duke
-and Duchess of Clarence. On the next day, after rising apparently in
-good health, and reading his morning letters, he was found by his
-servant stretched lifeless on the floor, and when the three most eminent
-physicians of the day were called in, it was ascertained that Lord
-Liverpool was suffering from an attack of an apoplectic and paralytic
-nature. As soon as prudence allowed, he was removed to his house at
-Combe Wood, where he gradually declined, both in mental and bodily
-power, and expired, in the presence of his wife, and his brother and
-successor, the Honourable Charles Cecil Jenkinson, on the 4th of
-December 1828.
-
-Lord Liverpool was twice married: first, to Lady Louisa Hervey, third
-daughter of the Bishop of Derry, fourth Earl of Bristol, who died in
-1821; and secondly, to Mary, daughter of Charles Chester, Esq., formerly
-Bagot, brother of the first Lord Bagot. He had no children by either
-marriage.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 6. NAPOLEON BUONAPARTE THE FIRST: EMPEROR OF FRANCE.
-
- _Dark green uniform._
-
- BY DAVID.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 7. GEORGE AUGUSTUS FREDERICK HENRY, SECOND EARL OF BRADFORD.
-
- _Blue coat. White waistcoat. Cloak._
-
- BORN 1789, DIED 1865.
-
- BY SIR GEORGE HAYTER.
-
-
-HE was the eldest son of the first Earl of Bradford by the Hon. Lucy
-Byng. He married, first, Georgina, only daughter of Sir Thomas
-Moncreiffe, Bart., by whom he had several children; and secondly, Helen,
-widow of Sir David Moncreiffe, Bart., and daughter of Æneas Mackay,
-Esq., who died at Cannes in 1869.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 8. ANNE BOLEYN, SECOND WIFE OF KING HENRY THE EIGHTH.
-
- _Large cap. Gown cut square._
-
- EXECUTED 1536.
-
-
-THIS is a crayon sketch by Holbein, with a memorandum in his own
-handwriting.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 9. ORLANDO, FIRST EARL OF BRADFORD.
-
- BORN 1762, DIED 1825.
-
- BY SIR GEORGE HAYTER.
-
-
-HE was the second Baron Bradford, and promoted to the Earldom in 1815.
-He married, in 1788, the Hon. Lucy Byng, daughter of George, fourth
-Viscount Torrington.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 10. QUEEN VICTORIA.
-
- A SKETCH BY THOMAS.
-
- EXECUTED FOR ORLANDO, LORD BRADFORD, WHEN LORD CHAMBERLAIN, BY HER
- MAJESTY’S PERMISSION.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 11. GEORGE THE SECOND, KING OF ENGLAND.
-
- _Red coat. Ribbon of the Garter._
-
- BORN 1683, CROWNED KING OF ENGLAND 1727, DIED 1760.
-
- BY PINE.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 13. EDWARD STANLEY, FOURTEENTH EARL OF DERBY, K.G.
-
- _Black frock-coat. White waistcoat. Right hand on a table. Left holds
- the string of eye-glass._
-
- BORN 1799, DIED 1869.
-
- BY SIR FRANCIS GRANT, P.R.A.
-
-
-HE was the eldest son of Edward, Lord Stanley, afterwards thirteenth
-Earl of Derby by Charlotte, second daughter of the Rev. Geoffrey Hornby.
-
-The subject of this notice was educated at Eton and Christ Church,
-Oxford, where in 1819 he gained the Chancellor’s prize for Latin verse
-for his poem of _Syracuse_. In 1821 he entered the House of Commons as
-member for Stockbridge, and sat subsequently for Preston, Windsor, and
-North Lancashire. He was Under-Secretary for the Colonies from 1830 to
-1833, Secretary of State for the Colonies from 1833 to 1834, and again
-from 1841 to 1845. In 1844 he was summoned to the House of Lords in his
-father’s barony of Stanley, and in 1859 was made a K.G. He was First
-Lord of the Treasury in 1852, 1858, and 1866. He was a strenuous opposer
-of Free-trade and the Repeal of the Corn Laws, and his name is
-invariably connected with ‘Protection.’ Lord Derby was remarkable as a
-statesman, a scholar, a wit, and an orator. In the latter capacity his
-enthusiasm and eloquence gained him the sobriquet of ‘the Rupert of
-Debate.’ In society his brilliant conversation, keen sense of humour,
-and genial disposition, made him a favourite with men and women of all
-classes and opinions, and his death was as much deplored in private as
-in political circles.
-
-He married, in 1825, Emma Caroline, second daughter of Edward, first
-Lord Skelmersdale, who survived him, and by whom he had two sons and a
-daughter.
-
-This little picture is the original design of Sir F. Grant for a large
-portrait of Lord Derby, which was painted for the family, and he
-afterwards finished it with great care, and gave it to Lord Bradford.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 15. HENRY GRESWOLD LEWIS, ESQ. OF MALVERN HALL.
-
- DIED 1819.
-
- BY CONSTABLE.
-
-
-HE married the Honourable Charlotte Bridgeman, daughter of Henry, Lord
-Bradford.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 16. THE HONOURABLE AND REVEREND GEORGE BRIDGEMAN.
-
- _Black coat._
-
- BORN 1765, DIED 1832.
-
- BY CONSTABLE.
-
-
-HE was the youngest son of Henry, first Lord Bradford, by the daughter
-and heir of the Rev. John Simpson. He entered the Church, and held
-successively the family livings of Weston, and Wigan (in Lancashire),
-where he died.
-
-In 1792 he married Lady Lucy Boyle, only daughter of Edmund, seventh
-Earl of Cork and Orrery, by whom he had two daughters and one son. Lady
-Lucy died in 1801, and in 1809 the widower married Charlotte Louisa,
-daughter of William Poyntz, Esq. of Midgham, Berks, who was first cousin
-to his first wife. This lady had no children, and she died in 1840, at
-Hampton Court. Mr. Bridgeman was a most amiable man and a most genial
-companion. He was beloved in his own family, and among a large circle of
-friends, by the servants of his household, the poor in his parish, by
-children, horses, and dogs. Indeed, the influence he exercised over
-animals was wonderful. In his latter days he possessed a beautiful
-thoroughbred chestnut mare, hot-tempered and violent by nature, who let
-no opportunity slip of taking the bit between her teeth. The grooms,
-until they became ‘up to her wicked ways,’ fought shy of riding her, and
-the writer’s sister, a splendid and fearless horsewoman, was very much
-mortified one day at finding she could not hold ‘uncle George’s’ mare.
-Yet the moment Mr. Bridgeman, then old and infirm, got into the saddle,
-the generous beast became as quiet as a lamb, and her master would often
-lay the reins on her beautiful neck, to show the perfect understanding
-that subsisted between them. Added to an earnest and by no means morose
-piety, the good pastor possessed a vein of genial humour, and a genuine
-love of fun, which was doubtless one of the qualities that endeared him
-to the younger part of the community, and an anecdote is told of him
-which is highly characteristic. One evening, dining alone at a club in
-London, where he was little known, it was impossible to avoid
-overhearing the conversation at a neighbouring table, which, strangely
-enough, turned on his own son, an officer of the Guards. The diners
-spoke of the pecuniary difficulties into which he had lately been
-plunged, and while they confessed his extravagance, they sang his
-praises—at least he was not selfish, at least he spent his money on
-others, etc. etc.; no doubt about it, Bridgeman was a capital fellow,
-the best fellow in the world, and many were the jolly parties they had
-had at his expense. Now this was a sore subject at that moment to the
-Rector of Wigan, but his sense of the ludicrous triumphed over every
-other feeling, and, rising quietly, he advanced towards the astonished
-group at the other table. ‘Gentlemen,’ he said, ‘I am very grateful for
-the handsome terms in which you have spoken of my son, but will you
-allow me to remark that it is I who am the best fellow in the world,
-since it is I who have paid for all those dinners and suppers, which I
-am delighted to think you have so much enjoyed.’
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 17. THE HONOURABLE JOHN BRIDGEMAN SIMPSON.
-
- _Brown coat. White waistcoat._
-
- BORN 1763, DIED 1850.
-
- AFTER HOPPNER. _The Original is at Babworth._
-
-
-HE was the second son of Henry Bridgeman, first Baron Bradford, of
-Weston under Lizard, by the daughter and heir of the Rev. John Simpson
-of Babworth, County Notts. In 1784 he married Henrietta Frances,
-daughter and heir of Sir Thomas Worsley, Bart., by whom (who died in
-1791) he had, besides two children who died young, a daughter who became
-heir to her uncle, Sir Richard Worsley, and married the Honourable
-Charles Pelham, afterwards Lord Yarborough. John Bridgeman assumed the
-maternal arms and name of Simpson in 1785, and eventually inherited the
-property of that family. In 1793 he married, as his second wife, Grace,
-daughter of Samuel Estwicke, Esq., by whom he had a very numerous
-family.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 18. SIR GEORGE GUNNING, BART.
-
- _Dark coat._
-
- BORN 1783, DIED 1823.
-
- BY CONSTABLE.
-
-
-HE was the eldest son of Sir Robert Gunning, Bart., K.B., of Horton,
-County North Hants, by Anne, only daughter of Robert Sutton, Esq. of
-Scofton, County Notts. Sir Robert had resided some time at the Courts of
-Berlin and St. Petersburg, as Minister Plenipotentiary, and was created
-a Baronet for his diplomatic services. His son and successor, George,
-married the daughter of Henry Bridgeman, first Lord Bradford, in 1794.
-Sir George represented the boroughs of Wigan, Hastings, and East
-Grinstead, at different periods in Parliament.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 19. SIR WILLIAM LOWTHER, BART.
-
- _Brown coat. White waistcoat. Right hand holding a fold of the coat.
- White frill._
-
- DIED 1763 (?).
-
- BY SIR JOSHUA REYNOLDS.
-
-
-HE was the son of Sir Thomas Lowther of Holker Hall, by Lady Elizabeth
-Cavendish (called in the family Lady Betty), daughter of the second Duke
-of Devonshire.
-
-A note in Sir Joshua Reynolds’ handwriting says that he made three
-copies of the portrait of Sir William Lowther: one for Major Kynaston,
-one for Mr. Bridgeman, and one for Lord Frederick Cavendish, Lady
-Elizabeth’s nephew, in 1758. He died unmarried, and left all the Holker
-property to Lord George Cavendish, on whose death in 1794 the estates
-devolved on the Duke of Devonshire, and are now in possession of the
-present Duke (1888). Sir William Lowther was a man of refined taste, had
-travelled much in Italy, and made an excellent collection of pictures,
-respecting the purchase of which he gives some amusing details in
-letters which are still extant at Holker.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 20. VICE-ADMIRAL LORD HUGH SEYMOUR.
-
- _Naval uniform._
-
- BORN 1759, DIED 1801.
-
- BY HOPPNER.
-
-
-HE was the fifth son of Francis, Earl, afterwards Marquis, of Hertford,
-by a daughter of the Duke of Grafton. He entered the Royal Navy while
-yet a boy, and justified his parents’ choice of a profession for him,
-never losing an opportunity of distinguishing himself in the service he
-loved. His first cruise was on board the _Pallas_, Captain the
-Honourable Leveson Gower.
-
-In 1785 he married Lady Horatia Waldegrave, daughter of James, second
-Earl Waldegrave, with whose beautiful features we are well acquainted in
-Sir Joshua Reynolds’ world-famed picture of ‘The Three Sisters,’ so long
-the glory of Strawberry Hill. The union was very happy, only marred by
-the separations which Lord Hugh’s profession entailed; they had a family
-of five sons and three daughters. Seymour gained post-rank early, and in
-1794 did good service in command of the _Leviathan_, on the glorious 1st
-of June (Lord Howe’s victory), when he was promoted to a colonelcy of
-marines. Next year he attained flag-rank, and commanded the _Spaniel_,
-under Lord Bridport, in that Admiral’s encounter with the French fleet
-off the island of St. Croix. From 1795 to 1798 Lord Hugh had a seat at
-the Board of Admiralty, after which he was appointed Commander-in-Chief
-of the Leeward Islands, during which time the colony of Surinam
-surrendered to the English combined naval and military forces under
-Admiral Lord Hugh Seymour and General Trigge. The Admiral’s eldest son,
-afterwards Admiral Sir George Seymour, whose son succeeded to the
-Marquisate of Hertford, was on board his father’s ship, but was
-invalided home in 1801, and on his arrival in England sad news awaited
-him. His beloved mother was no more; while a fast sailing ship brought
-the fatal tidings that a few days after his own departure, Lord Hugh had
-died of yellow fever. Yet another blow was in store for the poor young
-sailor, enfeebled by illness, and nearly overwhelmed by this
-accumulation of sorrow, in the loss of his favourite little brother,
-William, the pet of the family. The tenderest care and most consummate
-skill were needed to snatch George Seymour from the jaws of death. But
-he lived to be an honour to his profession, and a blessing to his family
-and friends. He inherited his mother’s beauty, as those who remember him
-can testify. His countenance was noble, his eyes large and brilliant,
-while even the wide gash of a sabre cut, received in action, across the
-lips, was powerless to mar the rare sweetness of his smile.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 21. HENRY, FIRST LORD BRADFORD.
-
- _Peer’s Parliamentary robes. White hair._
-
- DIED 1800.
-
- BY ROMNEY (?).
-
-[See page 188.]
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 22. GEORGE BRIDGEMAN, ESQ.
-
- _Uniform Grenadier Guards. Scarlet cloak._
-
- BORN 1727, DIED 1767.
-
- BY SIR JOSHUA REYNOLDS.
-
-
-HE was the third son of Sir Orlando Bridgeman, by Lady Ann Newport,
-daughter and heiress of the second Earl of Bradford. He died unmarried
-at Lisbon.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 23. CAPTAIN JOHN WILLETT PAYNE, R.N., AFTERWARDS VICE-ADMIRAL.
-
- _Naval uniform._
-
- BORN 1752, DIED 1803.
-
- BY HOPPNER.
-
-
-HE entered the Royal Navy in 1769, on board the _Quebec_, thirty-two
-guns, Captain Lord Ducie; then served in the _Eagle_, sixty-four guns,
-bearing the flag of Earl Howe, during the American war, whence he was
-made Lieutenant, and afterwards promoted to post-rank, July 1780.
-
-Captain Payne distinguished himself on several occasions, especially in
-an engagement in the West Indies, in 1783, with the _Pluto_, a ship of
-very superior force. He was in command of the _Russell_, in Lord Howe’s
-memorable victory, the glorious 1st of June 1794. In 1799 he became
-Rear-Admiral of the _Red_, and the following year succeeded Lord
-Bridport as Treasurer of Greenwich Hospital. He brought over Caroline of
-Brunswick, Princess of Wales, on board the _Jupiter_. Jack Payne, as he
-was called in society, was a great favourite and constant companion of
-the Prince of Wales, who appointed him Comptroller of his Household, in
-which capacity he made himself extremely popular by his courtesy,
-geniality, and genuine kindness. At the time of his death he had also
-the command (being then Vice-Admiral) of the coasts of Devonshire and
-Cornwall, and Lord Warden of the Stannaries.
-
-He died at Greenwich, whence he was followed to the grave by an
-interminable procession of carriages, many of which contained friends
-and acquaintances, for Admiral Payne was a most popular member of
-society. He was buried in St. Margaret’s, Westminster.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 24. THE HONOURABLE ORLANDO GEORGE CHARLES BRIDGEMAN, THIRD EARL OF
- BRADFORD.
-
- _When a child. In a red frock. Sitting on the lawn._
-
- BORN 1819.
-
- BY SIR GEORGE HAYTER, R.A.
-
-
-HE is the eldest son of the second Earl of Bradford (of the Bridgeman
-family), by Georgina, the only daughter of Sir Thomas Moncreiffe, Bart.
-Educated at Harrow School and at Trinity College, Cambridge; was M.P.
-for Shropshire, from 1842 until he succeeded to the Earldom in 1865; was
-Vice-Chamberlain of the Royal Household from February till December
-1852, and from February 1858 till June 1859; Lord Chamberlain from 1866
-till December 1868; and Master of the Horse to the Queen from 1874 till
-May 1880; and again from June 1885 till Feb. 1886. He is
-Deputy-Lieutenant of Staffordshire, and Deputy-Lieutenant of
-Warwickshire; Captain of the Salopian Yeomanry, 1844, and
-Lieutenant-Colonel of 1st Battalion of Shropshire Volunteers; also
-Lord-Lieutenant and _Custos Rotulorum_ of Shropshire since 1875.
-
-In 1844 he married the Honourable Selina Forester, youngest daughter of
-the first Lord Forester, by Lady Katherine Manners, second daughter of
-the fourth Duke of Rutland.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- DINING-ROOM.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- DINING-ROOM.
-
-
- -------
-
-
-No. 1. MARGARET HOWARD, COUNTESS OF CARLISLE, AND HER NIECE, LADY DIANA
- RUSSELL.
-
- _Reddish brown gown. Resting her hand on a table. Little girl in a white
- frock leaning against her aunt’s knee._
-
- BORN 1618. DIED 1664.
-
- BY STONE AFTER VANDYCK.
-
-
-SHE was the third daughter of Francis, fourth Earl of Bedford, by
-Catherine Brydges. She married at a very early age James Hay, afterwards
-second Earl of Carlisle, of that family. Margaret’s father-in-law was
-often connected with her own father in the political events of the reign
-of Charles the First. After the death of her husband in 1660, she
-married her second lord, Robert Rich, Earl of Warwick, second Earl of
-Holland; and lastly, Edward Montagu, Earl of Manchester, of whom
-Clarendon speaks in terms of high eulogium. The little girl in the
-picture is Lady Diana Russell, afterwards Lady Allington.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 3. THOMAS, EARL OF ARUNDEL AND SURREY.
-
- _In armour. With a boy beside him._
-
- BORN 1592. DIED 1646.
-
- BY VANDYCK.
-
-
-RESPECTING this picture there has been more than one controversy, and it
-has been not only erroneously named in a catalogue of a gallery at
-Madrid, but copied, doubtless from thence, into the edition of
-engravings of Vandyck’s portraits in the British Museum. It has been
-miscalled Don Alonzo Perez de Guzman el Bueno and his son. The late Lord
-Bradford, when in Madrid, saw a replica of the picture in his
-possession, and made a note to the effect that the portrait could not be
-that of the Spanish nobleman in question, according to the date of
-Vandyck’s death. His lordship identified it as that of Thomas, Earl of
-Arundel and Surrey, and his grandson.
-
-Thomas was the only son of Philip, Earl of Arundel (who died a prisoner
-in the Tower), by Anne, sister and co-heir of Thomas, Lord Dacre of
-Gillesland. He was deprived, by his father’s attainder, of the honours
-and greater part of the estates of his family, and had only the title of
-Lord Maltravers by courtesy during Queen Elizabeth’s reign, but was
-restored by Act of Parliament in the first year of James the First
-(1603) to all the titles and estates which his father had enjoyed before
-his attainder, as also to the Earldom of Surrey, and to such dignity of
-baronies as his grandfather, the Duke of Norfolk, had also forfeited. He
-was, moreover, created Earl Marshal in 1621, and Earl of Norfolk in
-1644; he married Lady Alatheia Talbot, daughter, and eventually sole
-heir, of Gilbert, seventh Earl of Shrewsbury, and was succeeded by his
-second son, Henry Frederick.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 5. DOROTHY, COUNTESS OF SUNDERLAND.
-
- _Crimson dress. Pearl ornaments. Pillar in the background._
-
- BORN 1620, DIED 1683-4.
-
- BY VANDYCK.
-
-
-IT has been well said of this beautiful and exemplary woman, that she is
-even (like the old Italian masters of painting) better known to
-posterity by her sobriquet than her name, for there were more than one
-Lady Sunderland, but only one ‘Saccharissa.’ The poet, therefore, may
-lay better claim to the title of godfather than the sponsors who held
-the infant Dorothy at the font. She was the eldest of the eight
-daughters of Robert Sidney, Earl of Leicester, of that name, by Dorothy,
-daughter of Henry Percy, ninth Earl of Northumberland. Lord and Lady
-Leicester bore a high character for ‘integrity and refinement of
-breeding at the Court of Charles the First, while in private life they
-shone a bright example of domestic harmony.’ Lady Leicester was a
-provident as well as a tender mother, and she entertained early projects
-in the matter of an advantageous marriage for her daughter, while
-Dorothy was still very young. At sixteen the girl was renowned for her
-beauty, and already surrounded by suitors. There appears to have been a
-talk at Court of the probability of a match with my Lord Russell, the
-heir of the house of Bedford; and Lady Leicester writes from the country
-to her lord at Court, in 1635:
-
- ‘It would rejoice me much to receave some hope of that lord’s
- addresses to Doll, that you writt of to me, for next to what
- consarns you, I confess she is considered by me above any thing
- of this world.’
-
-This marriage, however, was not to be, and there was shortly after a
-talk of the Earl of Devonshire, which, by Lady Leicester’s
-correspondence, appears to have had some let or hindrance, through the
-interference of meddling interferers; beside, she considered his mother
-and sister were ‘full of decaite and jugling,’ professing to desire the
-union. The next aspirant to the fair hand of the beautiful daughter of
-Penshurst was no other than the celebrated Lord Lovelace, of whom her
-mother thus writes: ‘I find my Lord Lovelace so uncertaine and so idle,
-so much addicted to mean companie, and easily drawn to debaucherie, it
-is now my studie to brake off with him. Many particulars I could tell
-you of his wildnesse, but the knowledge of them would be of no use to
-you, as he is likely to be a stranger to us. For tho’ his estate is
-goode, his person pretie enowfe, his witte much more than ordinarie, yet
-dare I not venture to give Doll to him.’ Lady Leicester concludes her
-letter to her husband by saying, ‘My deere hart, let not these cross
-accidents trouble you, for we do not know what God has provided for
-her.’
-
-The poet Waller now came forward and laid himself at the feet of the
-high-born beauty; he had been left a widower when quite young, and had
-gifts of nature and fortune to recommend him, but Dorothy’s parents
-looked for noble birth in a suitor for their daughter’s hand, and it is
-to be feared the poor poet was dismissed with some disdain. He was not
-inconsolable, however; he sought solace from his Muse, and, better
-still, in his union shortly afterwards with a willing bride.
-
-A marriage was at length concluded ‘for dear Doll,’ which was calculated
-to satisfy the best expectations of her parents, and to ensure her own
-happiness.
-
-Henry, Lord Spencer of Wormleighton, the first-born son of the second
-lord, by Penelope, daughter of Thomas Wriothesley, Earl of Southampton,
-was born at Althorp, his father’s country house, in 1620. To that
-father’s titles and large estates the young man succeeded in 1636, and
-in 1639 he was married at Penshurst, Lord Leicester’s beautiful home in
-Kent, to that nobleman’s eldest and most beloved daughter, Lady Dorothy
-Sidney. Lord Leicester was at the time Ambassador to the Court of
-France, and immediately after the marriage the happy young couple
-hurried off to join the bride’s father in Paris, where they remained for
-two years, that is to say, until Lord Leicester’s diplomatic mission was
-at an end. On their return, Lord Spencer took his seat in the House of
-Lords, and soon made himself an object of esteem and commendation by his
-talents and general good conduct. These qualities, added to his high
-position and large property, naturally made him an object worth
-contending for by the two adverse parties that were now beginning to
-convulse England. Lord Spencer had liberal views in the literal
-acceptation of the word, and stoutly opposed many measures which he
-considered arbitrary that emanated from the Throne; and the Parliament,
-which was now beginning to assume the executive, had great hopes of the
-young lord, and believed that they had bound him to their side when he
-accepted the Lord-Lieutenancy of his native county which they offered
-him. But Lord Spencer came of a loyal stock, and there is little doubt
-he cherished the hope of mediating between the King and his Parliament,
-in which expectation he had many sharers amongst the nobility and gentry
-of the land. He strove all he could to be a ‘daysman’ between the two
-factions, but finding that his admonitions to the Parliament when they
-broke out into open rebellion were of no avail, he proclaimed himself
-stoutly for the King; and in the early and blissful days of his married
-life he tore himself from the embrace of his beautiful wife and the calm
-happiness of his ancestral home, to mix in the noise, turmoil, and
-danger of a camp, in company with his kinsman and countyman, the gallant
-Spencer Compton, Earl of Northampton, who was destined to fall at Hopton
-Heath. Lord Spencer joined the King at York, and when the royal standard
-was unfurled at Nottingham, he took the field as a volunteer. In his
-constant letters to his ‘dearest harte,’ he gives a melancholy picture
-of the perplexed and unsatisfactory state of affairs in the royal army.
-He says: ‘The discontent that I and other honest men receive dayly is
-beyond expression,’ and he declares ‘that were it not for the punctilio
-of honour’ he would not ‘remaine an howre.’
-
-Lord Spencer was with the King at Edgehill, and with Prince Rupert at
-Bristol, etc. etc., and in 1643 he was raised to the dignity of Earl of
-Sunderland. He writes a long and most loving letter to his sweetest Doll
-from before Gloucester, and thanks her for her letters, ‘writing to you
-and hearing from you being the most pleasant entertainment I am capable
-of receiving in anie place, but especially here, where, but when I am in
-the trenches (which are seldom without my company), I am more solitarie
-than ever I was in mie life.’ In another letter written from Oxford in
-September 1643, he thus speaks of his little daughter: ‘Pray bless Popet
-for me, and tell her I would have writt to her, but on deliberation I
-deem it uncivil to return an answer to a ladie in anie other characters
-but her own, and that I am not learned enough to do.’ Alas! the brave
-soldier was never more destined to enjoy his wife’s dear company, or
-clasp his sweet Popet to his heart. Four days after that letter was
-penned, the writer was struck down by a cannon ball on the field of
-Newbury, in company with his friend and brother in arms, ‘the
-incomparable Falkland,’ and many other brave and loyal spirits. For
-twelve months Lord Sunderland had fought beside the King, as a
-volunteer, for he never would accept a commission. There is a most
-touching letter extant from Lord Leicester to his widowed daughter,
-which our limited space alone prevents our inserting here. The fair
-hopes contained in her old admirer Waller’s letter, written at the time
-of her marriage, to her sister, Lady Lucy Sidney, were far from being
-fulfilled. After wishing the couple every happiness, he says, ‘May her
-lord not mourn her long, but go hand in hand with her to that place
-where is neither marrying nor giving in marriage, but being divorced, we
-may all have an equal interest in her.’ There spoke the disappointed and
-jealous lover. Lady Sunderland was with child of a daughter at the
-period of her lord’s untimely death, who scarcely survived its birth.
-She retired to her husband’s estate in Northamptonshire, where she made
-herself generally beloved. ‘She is not to be mentioned,’ says Lloyd in
-his Memoirs of the Loyalists, ‘without the highest honour, in the
-catalogue of sufferers, to so many of whom her house was a sanctuary,
-her interest a protection, her estate a maintenance.’ Influenced, it is
-said, by her father’s wishes, she contracted a second marriage in 1652
-to Sir Robert Smythe, of the family of the Lords Strangford, a gentleman
-of Kent, but was again left a widow; she survived Sir Robert some time,
-and, we are told, she continued to see her old flame Waller, to whom she
-one day put the dangerous question—‘Pray, Master Waller, when will you
-write such pretty verses to me again?’ Was it the sting of old
-mortification which prompted the cruel answer, ‘When your ladyship is
-young and beautiful again’? By her first husband Lady Sunderland had two
-children, Robert, the second Earl,—the Minister of whom the anecdote is
-told that when Addison intrusted Edmund Smith with the task of writing a
-history of the Revolution of 1688, the proposed author asked the
-staggering question, ‘What shall I do with the character of Lord
-Sunderland?’ and a daughter, Dorothy, who married Sir George Saville,
-afterwards Marquis of Halifax. By her second husband she had an only
-child, Robert, Governor of Dover Castle. Lady Sunderland lies buried by
-the side of her dearly loved Henry in a beautiful monument, in the
-Spencer chapel, in the church of Brington, hard by Althorp House, and in
-that house her name is still a household word; and Saccharissa’s bed,
-the curtains of which, having her embroidered monogram of S twisting
-round columns, may still be seen in one of the principal guest-chambers.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 7. CHARLES THE FIRST, KING OF ENGLAND.
-
- _Front face and two profiles._
-
- BORN 1600, SUCCEEDED 1625, EXECUTED 1649.
-
- BY CARLO MARATTI AFTER VANDYCK.
-
-
-THE second son of James the First, by Anne of Denmark. Married Henrietta
-Maria of France. Dethroned and beheaded by his subjects. The original of
-this picture by Vandyck, now at Windsor Castle, was sent to Rome to
-Bernini, in order that he might make a bust from the same; Carlo Maratti
-copied the picture while in the sculptor’s studio. On first beholding
-the beautiful and noble head, the sculptor is said to have exclaimed,
-‘That is the portrait of one who is born to misfortune.’
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 12. VENETIAN COURTESAN.
-
- BY TITIAN.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 14. EDWARD SEYMOUR, FIRST DUKE OF SOMERSET, THE PROTECTOR.
-
- _Tight-fitting vest. Black hat._
-
- EXECUTED 1552.
-
- BY HOLBEIN.
-
-
-THE second but eldest surviving son of Sir John Seymour, of Wulfhall,
-County Wilts, by Margaret, daughter of Sir John Wentworth of Nettlested,
-County Suffolk. He was educated at Oxford and Cambridge, and joining his
-father, who was in high favour at Court, entered the army, distinguished
-himself in France, and was knighted for his services in 1525. On his
-return to England he was appointed Esquire to the King, and was one of
-the challengers in the tilt-yard at Greenwich, when Henry the Eighth
-kept his Christmas there.
-
-On the King’s marriage with his sister, Jane Seymour, Edward was created
-Viscount Beauchamp, and in 1537 Earl of Hertford. He was then sent to
-France on a mission, and was created Knight Companion of the Garter, at
-Hampton Court, on his return. From this time his life became most
-eventful. He proceeded twice to Scotland, high in command, and again to
-France, where he was instrumental in concluding a peace with that
-country. Honours and distinctions too many to enumerate were heaped on
-the King’s brother-in-law, even after the death of poor Queen Jane. He
-was one of the many executors of Henry the Eighth, by whose will he was
-appointed guardian to the young King, and so prompt were his measures
-and so successful his ambitious and self-seeking policy that when the
-nephew was proclaimed King in London, the uncle was appointed Protector
-of the realm. He already bore the titles of Earl and Viscount, and
-Edward the Sixth, not content with adding the title of Baron, bestowed a
-ducal coronet upon him, in order that the name of that family, ‘from
-which our most beloved mother Jane, late Queen of England, drew her
-beginning, might not be clouded by any higher title or colour of
-dignity.’ Thus ran the words of the patent. When the Duke of Norfolk was
-attainted, the Protector was made Earl Marshal for life. His power now
-became almost absolute, and the boy King, delighted to do his uncle
-honour, elected that he should sit on the right hand of the throne.
-Indeed Somerset was now king in all but name, and his enemies, of whom
-there were many, accused him of aspiring to the Crown in good earnest.
-It was alleged against him that he used the royal pronoun ‘we,’ and
-signed himself ‘Protector by the grace of God.’ But the life of
-Protector Somerset belongs to the chronicles of the history of England.
-Numerous factions rose up against him, at the head of which were the
-Earl of Warwick, his sworn enemy, and his own ungrateful brother,
-Thomas, Lord Seymour of Sudley. Many charges were brought against him;
-he was deprived of all his high offices, and imprisoned in the Tower.
-The young King, who loved him dearly, had little power to befriend his
-uncle, whose estates were forfeited, and he was treated with insult and
-contumely. The Earl of Warwick was bent on his destruction. Arraigned of
-high treason at Westminster Hall, he demanded a trial of his peers, was
-acquitted of the principal charge, but found guilty of felony, and after
-several months’ imprisonment, in spite of every attempt on King Edward’s
-part, Edward Seymour, Duke of Somerset, was condemned to die on the
-scaffold. On reaching the platform, he kneeled in prayer, and afterwards
-addressed the people, with the majority of whom he was a great
-favourite, in calm and measured terms, declaring his innocence, his
-loyalty to the King, and his love of his native country. A tumult took
-place among the people, and a horseman appearing suddenly in the crowd,
-a cry was raised of ‘A pardon! a pardon!’ But all the time his
-arch-enemy, Lord Warwick (or rather Northumberland, as he then was),
-stood by untouched, shaking his cap and making signs to the people to be
-quiet. We have not space to make extracts from a dying speech, which for
-manliness, forbearance, and piety could scarcely be surpassed. The Duke,
-unbuckling his sword, presented it to the Lieutenant of the Tower, gave
-the executioner money, bade all near him farewell, and then kneeling
-down, arranged his collar and covered his face, which showed ‘no signs
-of trouble,’ with his handkerchief. Laying his head upon the block, he
-called out thrice ‘Lord Jesu, save me,’ and then received the
-death-stroke.
-
-Edward, first Duke of Somerset, was twice married. First, to Catherine,
-daughter and co-heir of Sir William Fillol, of Woodlands, County Dorset,
-respecting whom there exists a mystery and rumours of misconduct.
-Certain it is that her son was disinherited. There seems little doubt,
-at all events, that the Duke’s second wife, the daughter of Sir Edward
-Stanhope, of Bampton, County Dorset, an ambitious and violent woman,
-worked on her husband’s mind, to the detriment of her predecessor’s
-children, in spite of which the coveted titles devolved after some
-generations on Catherine Fillol’s descendants, ancestors in direct line
-to the present Duke of Somerset.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 16. PORTRAIT OF A LADY. UNKNOWN.
-
- BY LUCAS CRANACH.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 18. PORTRAIT OF A LADY WITH A MONKEY.
-
- BY PARIS BORDONE (?).
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 22. PORTRAIT OF A CHILD.
-
- BY PAUL VERONESE.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 23. ANTHONY VANDYCK
-
- _As Paris._
-
- BORN 1599, DIED 1641.
-
- AFTER VANDYCK.
-
-
-THE eldest son of a merchant in Antwerp (himself a painter in glass), by
-one Maria Cuypero. Little Anthony’s mother was a skilful artist in
-embroidery, and encouraged her boy’s taste for drawing, in the rudiments
-of which he received instruction from his father. When only ten years of
-age he became the pupil of Hendrik van Balen, a much-esteemed painter,
-who had studied in Italy; but young Vandyck had set his heart on
-entering the studio of his famous fellow-citizen, Peter Paul Rubens, and
-that desire was fulfilled. His remarkable talent and untiring industry
-made him a favourite both of master and scholars, when an incident
-happened which brought him into prominent notice. It chanced one
-afternoon, when Rubens was absent, that the scholars invaded the
-sanctity of the private studio, and, in the exuberance of animal
-spirits, indulged in what in modern parlance is called ‘bear-fighting.’
-An unfinished Holy Family stood on an easel, the colours not yet dry,
-and, in the course of the rough play, one of his companions pushed Van
-Diepenbeke so heavily against the precious canvas that the arm of the
-Magdalen and the head of the Virgin were nearly effaced, and all the
-colours smudged. The general consternation may easily be conceived. A
-council was held, and a general decision arrived at that the most
-skilful among the students should endeavour to repair the mischief.
-Unanimous choice fell on Vandyck, who began to work in right earnest,
-for there was not a moment to lose. There were but a few hours of
-daylight left him, but he accomplished his task before nightfall. Early
-next morning the dreaded moment arrived. Rubens entered his studio in
-order to examine the work of the preceding evening, when he pronounced
-the memorable words which seemed to bestow a diploma on his young
-disciple: ‘Why, this looks better than it did yesterday!’ Then,
-approaching nearer, he detected the traces of a strange hand.
-Investigation and explanation followed, and Vandyck came in for great
-praise from the lips of his beloved master. Rubens was most desirous
-that his talented pupil should proceed to Italy to study the works of
-the great masters, but in the meantime the young man had received an
-invitation to England. The first visit he paid to our country was short
-and unsatisfactory, and there are so many discrepancies in the accounts
-of the work he did at that period and his reasons for leaving England
-somewhat abruptly, that we refrain from entering further on the subject.
-From England Vandyck proceeded to the Hague, where he painted portraits
-of every class and denomination of person, commencing with the Court and
-family of the Stadtholder, Henry Frederick. Nobles, warriors, statesmen,
-burghers, all vied for the honour of sitting to him. The news of his
-father’s illness recalled him to Antwerp. He arrived just in time to
-receive that father’s blessing, and listen to his last injunctions,
-which included an order to paint an altar for the Chapel of the
-Dominican Sisters, who had nursed him tenderly in his illness. After
-many delays from various causes Vandyck arrived in Venice, where he
-studied Titian and Veronese, and afterwards proceeded to Genoa, where he
-became the favourite of the proudest nobles of that proud city, and
-adorned almost every palace therein with splendid portraits. At Rome he
-remained some years; the first order he received being that of the
-world-renowned portrait of Cardinal Bentivoglio, which attracted a crowd
-of sitters to his studio, including all the nobility of the city and
-most of the foreign visitors. He then made his way to Florence and most
-of the northern cities of Italy, with a flying visit to Sicily, whence
-he was driven by the outbreak of the plague. He returned to Antwerp,
-where he at first shared the proverbial fate of the prophet in his own
-country, and met with much ill-will and small patronage, until his old
-friend Rubens came to his rescue by buying every completed picture in
-his late scholar’s studio, and recommending and befriending him on every
-occasion. Shortly afterwards Rubens departed from Antwerp on a
-diplomatic mission, and he left Vandyck undisputed master of the field.
-His hands were now full; he received endless commissions both in
-portraits and sacred subjects. He afterwards went to Paris, and paid two
-visits to England; the second time he was received at Court with every
-mark of distinction. Charles the First treated the noble Fleming as a
-personal friend, taking the greatest delight in his society. He became
-the centre of attraction, and the cynosure of all eyes. Pre-eminently
-handsome, brilliant in conversation, a good linguist, an enlightened
-traveller—even without the crowning quality of his splendid talent, the
-painter became a shining light in the refined and aristocratic circles
-of the English capital. The King bestowed the honour of knighthood on
-him, and presented him with a valuable miniature of himself set in
-diamonds. Both their Majesties sat constantly for their portraits, and
-it is needless to observe that every country house in England is
-enriched by treasures from the brush of Vandyck. The King and the Duke
-of Buckingham were busy in arranging a suitable match for their friend
-and favourite. The lady selected was Mary Ruthven, a member of the
-Queen’s household, and grand-daughter of the unfortunate Earl Gowrie,
-much esteemed for her goodness and beauty, who visited Antwerp with her
-husband shortly after their marriage, where they were received with
-every mark of respect and distinction. After this they went to Paris,
-where Vandyck met with disappointment, and fell into bad health, and on
-his return to England he found that country in a state of confusion and
-political strife, his royal and private friends involved in trouble and
-perplexity, the King and Queen both absent from London, and the
-Parliament in arms against the Crown. Sir Anthony’s health declined,
-both physically and morally. He gave himself up to the pursuit of
-alchemy, and would stand for hours over a hot fire in the vain hope of
-obtaining the philosopher’s stone; He grew haggard and wrinkled while
-still in the prime of life. The King, returning to London, and hearing
-of his friend’s illness, sent his own physician, but all human aid was
-unavailing. A severe attack of gout, combined with other maladies,
-proved fatal, and on the 9th of December 1641, the man who by many has
-been considered the chief of the world’s portrait painters breathed his
-last. Followed by a large retinue of friends, he was buried in St.
-Paul’s Cathedral, leaving a most exemplary will, in which wife, child,
-sister, servants, were all remembered, as also the poor in two parishes.
-He left an only daughter, Justiniana, who married Sir John Stepney of
-Prendergast, Pembroke, and afterwards Martin de Carbonnell. She received
-a pension from King Charles the Second.
-
-Lady Vandyck married a Welsh baronet, Sir Robert Pryce, as his second
-wife.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 25. PORTRAIT OF A CHILD.
-
- BY PAUL VERONESE.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 26. SIR NICHOLAS CAREW.
-
- _Black and white dress._
-
- BEHEADED 1539.
-
- BY HOLBEIN.
-
-
-THE Carews came of an ancient family in Devonshire, but the branch to
-which Sir Nicholas belonged had settled at Beddington, in Surrey, an
-estate that had come into their possession by marriage.
-
-Nicholas was the eldest son of Sir Richard Carew, Knight-Banneret, by
-Magdalen, daughter of Sir Thomas Oxenbridge, Bart., of Ford, in Sussex.
-When Sir Richard died, and his son succeeded, the landed property was
-very extensive, and it was said the owner might start from his own
-house, and ride in any direction straight on end for ten miles at least
-on his own land. When still a youth Nicholas went to Paris, where, we
-are told, he became so enamoured of French manners, customs, and
-fashions, that on his return to England he could speak and boast of
-nothing else. Handsome, well-born, and accomplished, he soon attracted
-the notice of Henry the Eighth, who welcomed him at Court, and appointed
-him a Gentleman of the Privy Chamber, a place which was then of much
-higher standing than in later days. But Carew did not make himself
-popular in the royal household. The constant comparisons which he daily
-drew between the French and English Courts, to the great disparagement
-of the latter, offended his colleagues in the highest degree, and were
-not calculated to gratify the King. Henry resolved to give the young man
-a lesson. If he were so devoted to France, to France he should go, and
-that without delay. At the same time, unwilling to dismiss him without
-some ostensible reason, he appointed Sir Nicholas governor of a fortress
-in Picardy, which was in the hands of the English. A castle in a
-provincial town did not offer the charms which Carew had found in the
-splendid capital of France, and it may easily be believed the office did
-not suit his taste. He doubtless petitioned the King; at all events, he
-was recalled, forgiven, and taken back into favour. He now became
-Henry’s almost inseparable companion, and was foremost in all the
-jousts, tournaments, maskings, and all kinds of Court revelry, in which
-they both excelled and delighted. Carew was, moreover, appointed Master
-of the Horse, at that period one of the highest offices in the realm,
-and Knight of the Garter.
-
-The favour of Henry the Eighth was as easily lost as won, and Fuller
-tells us that a tradition in the family reported that Carew’s downfall
-proceeded, in the first instance, from a quarrel between him and his
-master at bowls, ‘when his Grace, who was no good fellow, and would
-always rather give than take in repartee,’ so exasperated his Master of
-the Horse, ‘that his answer was rather true than discreet, consulting
-his own animosity rather than his allegiance, whereat the King was so
-offended that Sir Nicholas fell from the top of his favour to the bottom
-of his displeasure, and was bruised to death.’ ‘This’—we quote Fuller
-all the time—‘was the true cause of his execution. He was charged with
-high treason, as accomplice with the Marquis of Exeter, Lord Montague,
-Sir Edward Neville, and others, in a plot to depose King Henry the
-Eighth, and place Cardinal Pole on the throne. They were all found
-guilty, and sentenced to death, with the exception of the Cardinal’s
-brother, who saved his own life by betraying his confederates. The
-evidence against Sir Nicholas appears to have been slight, but he was
-out of favour, and everything was turned to his prejudice. He was
-beheaded on Tower Hill in 1539.’ Holinshed said ‘he made a godly
-confession of his fault, and his superstitious faith.’ He was a Roman
-Catholic. Sir Nicholas Carew married Elizabeth, daughter and afterwards
-sole heir of Sir Thomas Bryan, Master of Common Pleas, by whom he had
-one son and three or four daughters.
-
-The son, Sir Francis Carew, never married, but having regained a
-considerable portion of the estates forfeited on his father’s attainder,
-during the reign of Elizabeth, he bequeathed his property to his
-sister’s son, Sir Nicholas Throckmorton, on condition that he assumed
-the name and arms of Carew.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 27. AN OLD MAN’S HEAD.
-
- BY VANDYCK.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 28. MAN’S HEAD.
-
- BY TINTORETTO.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 30. THE COUNTESS OF OXFORD.
-
- _Blue and white dress. Holding a nosegay. A table beside her._
-
- BY VANDYCK.
-
-
-BEATRIX VAN HEMMEND, a Dutch lady, a native of Friesland, married Robert
-de Vere, nineteenth Earl of Oxford. He died in 1632, at the siege of
-Maestricht, leaving an only surviving child, in whom the earldom became
-extinct.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 33. PORTRAIT. UNKNOWN.
-
- BY TITIAN.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 36. SIR KENELM DIGBY.
-
- _Black dress. Hand on his breast. A globe by his side._
-
- BORN 1603, DIED 1665.
-
- BY VANDYCK.
-
-
-SON of Sir Everard Digby, born at Gothurst or Gayhurst, County Bucks,
-the property of his mother, daughter and sole heir of Sir William
-Mulsho. He was but a child when his father suffered death as one of the
-conspirators in the Gunpowder Plot. The Crown laid claim to the estates
-and revenues of the family; but the widowed Lady Digby, a woman of great
-energy and determination, not only saved her own dower by her strenuous
-efforts, but rescued a few hundreds for her son out of the wreck, and,
-although a rigid Roman Catholic, she suffered her boy to be educated as
-a Protestant from prudential motives. The romance of the loves of Kenelm
-Digby and Venetia Stanley, which made such a noise at the time, and has
-been the subject of curiosity and controversy ever since, whenever their
-names are mentioned, began at a very early age. Sir Edward Stanley, of
-the noble house of Derby, lived at Tong Castle, County Salop. He married
-the daughter and co-heir of the Earl of Northumberland, who brought him
-two daughters, ‘the divine Venetia’ being the youngest. Her mother died
-when she was a few months old. The widower gave himself up to grief,
-shunned the world, and could not even derive comfort from the society of
-his children. He sent them therefore (or at all events Venetia) to the
-care of a relative, who was a neighbour of Lady Digby’s. Thus began the
-acquaintance, and Sir Edward’s beautiful little girl and Lady Digby’s
-lovely boy met constantly, and played at love-making, jealousy, rivalry,
-coquetry, quarrels, reconciliations,—in fact a perfect rehearsal of all
-the drama that was to be enacted in good earnest a few years later. The
-marriage of the Princess Elizabeth with the Elector Palatine, afterwards
-King of Bohemia, called Sir Edward to London. With a violent wrench he
-tore himself away from his seclusion, and sending for Venetia carried
-her with him to the Court of King James, then the scene of great
-festivity.
-
-In all these gaieties, according to Digby’s account, the juvenile beauty
-took part, and was the centre of admiration. In the meantime her young
-lover pursued his studies under the care of Laud, Dean of Gloucester,
-subsequently Archbishop of Canterbury, and afterwards with Dr. Thomas
-Allen, an eminent scholar, at Oxford.
-
-Digby distinguished himself at the University, where he remained two
-years, but whenever he returned home for the vacation, the flirtation
-with his fair neighbour was resumed. He wrote a strange and wild romance
-respecting her, in which it is impossible to disentangle truth from
-fiction, but some of the adventures are too marvellous for belief, and
-the whole narrative is disagreeable, and tedious into the bargain.
-
-His jealousy seems to have been excited by a certain courtier, whose
-suit, he affirms, was favoured by Venetia’s governess. Lady Digby was
-too wise a mother to smile on such a precocious courtship, even if she
-disbelieved the reports which had already begun to circulate,
-detrimental to Mistress Stanley’s reputation.
-
-She despatched her son on foreign travel, but before his departure the
-lovers had met and plighted their troth. According to the traveller’s
-own account, he made a conquest of the French Queen when in Paris _en
-route_ for Italy.
-
-A report of his death having been accidentally or purposely circulated,
-Venetia’s conduct on the occasion was differently represented to her
-absent lover, some declaring she was inconsolable, others that she lent
-a willing ear to the suit of the very same courtier who had before
-excited Kenelm’s jealousy.
-
-Nothing can be more bombastic and high-flown than the language in which
-he describes the fluctuations of his passion for Venetia, his implicit
-trust in her constancy in one page, his doubts and suspicions in
-another.
-
-It seems more than probable that the prudent Lady Digby intercepted her
-son’s love-letters, and did all in her power to prevent a marriage she
-thought most undesirable, and she was doubtless delighted when Kenelm
-accompanied his kinsman, Lord Bristol, to Spain, where he was then
-negotiating the Prince of Wales’s marriage with the Infanta at Madrid.
-Kenelm became himself attached to the Prince’s suite, and took an active
-part in diplomatic transactions.
-
-In this land of romance it may well be imagined that the handsome and
-accomplished Englishman ran the gauntlet of many adventures among the
-dark-eyed daughters of the South, nor does he omit to allude to
-innumerable conquests; indeed, he went so far as to have a portrait of
-himself painted with an effigy of one of his victims in the background,
-yet he incessantly boasted of his constancy to the absent loved one. On
-his return to England with the Prince of Wales, he was knighted by the
-King at Hinchingbrook, and immediately flew to his lady-love in spite of
-maternal prohibition. Then followed recriminations, explanations, trials
-of her faith and virtue, challenges, duels—a stormy suit, indeed,
-according to his own testimony.
-
-Respecting the date of their marriage there is great difference of
-opinion. At all events, Kenelm insisted on its being kept secret, nor
-was poor Venetia allowed to announce it, even when a fall from her horse
-brought on a premature confinement, which nearly cost her her life.
-
-King James admired Sir Kenelm for his great erudition, and complimented
-him on his essays on Sympathetic Powder, Alchemy, and other subjects
-bordering on the supernatural. On the accession of Charles the First,
-Sir Kenelm Digby was made Gentleman of the Privy Chamber, Commissioner
-of the Navy, and Governor of the Trinity House, shortly after which, he
-was appointed to the command of a naval squadron, sent to the
-Mediterranean against the Venetian fleet and the Algerine pirates.
-
-In this voyage he was eminently successful, bringing the Venetians to
-terms, chastising the pirates, and releasing a large number of English
-slaves. It is said that on the eve of his embarkation, a second son
-being born to him, he had permitted his wife to declare their marriage,
-and had consigned her to the care of his kinsman, Lord Bristol, during
-his absence from England. About this time, his faithful old friend,
-Thomas Allen, bequeathed to him a splendid library, which he made over
-to the Bodleian.
-
-In 1633, after his return, his beautiful but far from happy wife died,
-and the mystery which had shrouded Venetia’s whole life hung like a dark
-cloud over her death, and reports of all kinds were current.
-
-There is no doubt that Sir Kenelm had been in the habit of making
-chemical and alchemical experiments on Venetia for some time past, and
-the tradition of the concoction of snails which he had invented as a
-preservative of her naturally brilliant complexion is still extant at
-Gayhurst, where it is said the somewhat rare breed of large ‘Pomatia’ is
-still to be found.
-
-By Digby’s desire his wife’s head (‘which contained but little brain’)
-was opened, and he decided that she had taken an overdose of viper wine.
-But spiteful women declared she had fallen a victim to a viper husband’s
-jealousy, though Aubrey, who tells sad tales of Venetia before her
-marriage, says she was a blameless wife.
-
-There is more than one portrait of her, with allegorical emblems of
-Innocence, Slander, and the like. Her name had often been coupled with
-that of the Earl of Dorset, and some said he had settled an annuity on
-her, which was paid up to the time of her death. Be this as it may, Sir
-Kenelm and Lady Digby always dined once a year with my Lord Dorset, who
-received them courteously but formally, only permitting himself to kiss
-the beauty’s hand with great respect.
-
-Venetia was buried in a church near Newgate, in a tomb of black marble,
-with long inscriptions, surmounted by a copper-gilt bust, all destroyed
-in the great fire. Numerous epitaphs were written in her honour. Ben
-Jonson calls her ‘A tender mother, a discreet wife, a solemn mistress, a
-good friend, so lovely and charitable in all her petite actions, so
-devote in her whole life,’ etc.
-
-Whatever Sir Kenelm’s real feelings were, his outward grief was extreme.
-He retired to Gresham College, lived like a hermit, studied chemistry,
-wore a long mourning cloak, and left his beard unshorn. Although it was
-generally supposed that his secession from the Protestant faith took
-place when he was in Spain, it was not until 1653 that he wrote to his
-friend Laud (whose admirable answer is extant) to announce the fact. He
-was a firm adherent of Charles I., and greatly esteemed by Henrietta
-Maria; but his loyalty got him into trouble with the Parliament, and he
-was exiled to France. Returning in a few months he was imprisoned in
-1640 for nearly three years, and was supposed only to have regained his
-liberty through the intercession of the French Queen, who had loved him
-twenty years before. His release, however, was conditional. He was
-forbidden to take part in any public affairs, and he therefore gave
-himself up to literary and scientific pursuits, and engaged in a
-polemical correspondence with his quondam tutor, Laud, whom he is said
-to have tempted to change his faith, by the bait of a Cardinal’s Hat.
-Sir Kenelm returned to France and frequented the Court of his old flame,
-the Queen Dowager, where his noble appearance, almost gigantic size, his
-handsome features, agreeable conversation and manners, his learning, and
-last, but perhaps not least, his predilection for the occult sciences,
-made him an universal favourite. On the death of his eldest son, killed
-on the Royalist side at the battle of St. Neot’s, Sir Kenelm returned to
-compound for his estates, but was not suffered to remain in England. He
-went back to Paris, where Henrietta Maria made him her Chancellor; and
-he was then intrusted with a mission to Pope Innocent X., who welcomed
-him at first, but after a time the ‘Englishman grew high, and hectored
-at His Holiness, and gave him the lie.’
-
-Once more in England, after the dissolution of the Long Parliament,
-Cromwell took him into his confidence, hoping by his mediation to gain
-over the Roman Catholics.
-
-His conduct in these circumstances has been praised by some and censured
-by others, as may well be imagined, according to religious and political
-bias. He travelled through France, Lower Germany, and the Palatinate,
-always seeking and being sought by men of letters; and 1660 saw him once
-more back in his native land.
-
-Charles II. showed him but little favour. He was nominated F.R.S., and
-resided (1663) in a fair house in Covent Garden, where he had a
-laboratory. ‘Philosopher, theologian, courtier, soldier; polite,
-amiable, handsome, graceful.’ Lord Clarendon’s testimony is, ‘eccentric,
-vain, unstable in religion, a duellist.’ These are the counterbalancing
-portraits of Sir Kenelm Digby. He desired to be buried near Venetia. His
-epitaph was as follows:—
-
- ‘Under this tomb the matchless Digby lies,
- Digby the great, the brilliant, and the wise;
- This age’s wonder, for his noble partes,
- Skilled in six tongues, and learn’d in all the artes!
- Born on the day he died, th’ eleventh of June,
- And that day bravely fought at Scanderoon:
- It’s rare that one and the same day should be
- The day of birth, and death, and victory.’
-
-He had four sons and one daughter.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 40. SIR THOMAS KILLIGREW.
-
- _Red slashed doublet. Fair hair. A bracelet on his arm. His hand rests
- on a dog’s head._
-
- BORN 1611, DIED 1683.
-
- BY VANDYCK.
-
-
-HE was the younger son of Sir Robert Killigrew of Hanworth, County
-Middlesex, by Mary, daughter of Sir Henry Wodehouse, who married,
-secondly, Sir Thomas Stafford. Thomas, or as he was usually called, Tom
-Killigrew, was early initiated into the mysteries of Court life, being
-appointed Page of Honour to King Charles the First, to whom he remained
-faithful, and followed Charles the Second and his mother in their exile.
-About the year 1651 the King sent him in a diplomatic capacity to
-Venice, where Killigrew seems to have disported himself to his heart’s
-content, and it was evidently here that he imbibed that passion for
-music and the drama, which never forsook him, but which converted him
-into a dramatist and a theatrical _entrepreneur_, rather, we should say,
-confirmed him in these tastes which were already developed in his
-boyhood; for we have an anecdote of his school days, how he would go to
-the Red Bull Tavern, not far from the theatre, during the performance,
-and how, more than once, the waiter came in crying, ‘Who will go and be
-a devil on the stage, and he shall see the play for nothing?’ an offer
-with which young Tom gladly closed. Thus began his career; for was not
-he a merry devil the chief part of his life?
-
-Venice, as we have seen, suited his humour well, and Thomas was
-evidently one of those foreigners who go on the principle of howling
-with the wolves, and doing at Rome more than the Romans do. In fact, he
-was so carried away by the vivacity of the Venetians, the maskings,
-flirtings, and what not, which he encountered in the fair city of the
-sea, that Thomas began to out-Herod Herod, and lived his life at such a
-rate as to scandalise the Venetian authorities, who directed their
-ambassador at Paris to wait on the English King, and urge the recall of
-his envoy. Charles complied, but it was not likely that the peccadilloes
-of which ‘Tommaso’ had been guilty should appear unpardonable in the
-eyes of the merry monarch, and he received the delinquent into especial
-favour, and on the Restoration Tom became Groom of the Bedchamber, and
-the King’s inseparable companion. Pepys, in his diary of 1660, about the
-time of Charles’s return to his dominions, records his meeting with Tom,
-when being on my Lord Sandwich’s ship, he met, ‘with other fine company,
-Tom Killigrew, a merry droll, but a gentleman, full of wit and humour, a
-general favourite, especially with the King. And I walked with him for
-some time on the deck, and he told most amusing stories.’
-
-Killigrew had not been long in England before he put a darling scheme
-into execution, namely, to bring over an Italian troop of actors from
-Venice to perform in singing and recitative. He had by this time set up
-as a dramatic author, and was instrumental in introducing into England
-the fashion of female performers, for, until the Restoration, actresses
-had not appeared on the stage, although in Italy, Spain, and elsewhere,
-the female characters were always represented by women. It may easily be
-believed that this innovation fell in with the royal taste, and there
-was great amusement afforded by a representation of the Parson’s
-Wedding, a comedy of Master Killigrew’s own writing, entirely performed
-by females. In another portion of his diary Pepys relates how he met Tom
-at my Lord Brouncker’s one night in company with a certain musician, one
-Signor Baptista, and Killigrew told us how they proposed to give an
-opera entirely in the Italian language, and he goes on to say that
-Baptista was singer, poet, and all in one, and that he sang them one of
-the acts, and that from the words alone, without any music prickt, which
-seemed to astonish good Master Samuel, who makes some of his accustomed
-sapient remarks on the occasion: ‘I did not understand the words, and so
-do not know if they are fitted, but I perceive there is a proper accent
-in every country’s discourse, but I am not as much smitten by it as if I
-were acquainted with the language.’
-
-Good Master Pepys had made a discovery in those early times, which we
-recommend to the notice of many who pass in these days for proficients
-in the vocal line. The newly-born Italian opera now became the rage,
-very often, indeed, to the detriment of the English theatrical
-companies, so much so that sometimes Killigrew’s own dramatic
-productions were played to empty benches. Besides Signor Baptista there
-was another eminent musician, Francesco Corbetta, who not only sang in
-opera, but gave lessons in singing and the guitar, an instrument
-hitherto almost unknown in this country.
-
- ‘Famossissimo maestro, di ghitarra,
- Qual Orfeo in suonar, ognun il narra!’
-
-Guitar-playing became a perfect mania among the fine ladies and
-gentlemen at Court, ‘the King’s relish for that instrument,’ says De
-Grammont, ‘helping to bring it into vogue, and the guitar (whether for
-show or use) was now as necessary an appendage to a lady’s toilet-table
-as her rouge or patch-box. In fact, there was a universal strumming of
-the whole _guitarrery_ at Court.’ Lord Arran, a younger son of the Duke
-of Ormonde, and his sister were amongst the greatest proficients;
-indeed, Lady Chesterfield was as much admired for her musical talent as
-for her undoubted beauty, and it was whispered her lord was very jealous
-of the Duke of York’s evident appreciation of both these attractions.
-Tom Killigrew’s popularity with the King increased daily, and there was
-a report that his Majesty intended to revive the disused office of Court
-Jester in the person of his favourite. We believe such an _officer_ had
-been attached to his father’s household, but the post could only have
-been nominal. An old writer thus describes the duties of a Court Jester,
-‘A witty and jocose person kept by princes, to inform them of their
-faults, and those of other people.’ We scarcely give Charles the Second
-credit for such a motive in his election. Pepys alludes to the
-circumstance in these words, ‘Tom Killigrew has a fee out of the
-Wardrobe for Cap and Bells as King’s Jester, and may tease and rule
-anybody, the greatest person, without offence, in privilege of his
-place.’ Of this privilege Tom took advantage, sometimes in a good cause,
-for with all their faults and failings, both he and his kindred spirit,
-Nell Gwynne, regretted the bad odour into which Charles had fallen
-through his neglect of public affairs, and Nell often admonished her
-royal lover on the subject. One day the two friends hatched a small
-plot. Says Nelly, ‘I have been just listening to the complaints of one
-of the Court Lords, of Charles’s neglect of all duty, and how that he
-has quite forgotten the existence of such a thing as a Cabinet Council,
-upon which I bet his Lordship £100 that the King should attend the very
-next. He sneered, but accepted the wager.’ Now we do not know if Nelly
-promised her accomplice to go halves, but we do know that that evening,
-when the King was in Madam Gwynne’s apartments, the door flew open, and
-in burst Tom, disguised as a pilgrim. The King swore at him, and asked
-if he had not heard the royal command that he should not be disturbed.
-‘Oh yes, sire,’ was the reply, ‘but I was obliged to come and take leave
-of your Majesty before my departure.’
-
-‘Why, where the —— are you going, and what does this absurd masquerading
-mean?’
-
-‘I am starting this very moment for hell.’
-
-‘Already,’ sneered the King, ‘and on what errand?’
-
-‘To beg and pray of the devil to lend me Oliver Cromwell, if for ever so
-short a time, to attend to the affairs of the country, as his successor
-spends all his time in pleasure.’
-
-The Jester was forgiven, and Nelly won her wager.
-
-Another time Charles taxed his fool with telling everybody that the King
-was suffering from torturing pains in the nose, and asked the meaning of
-such a senseless report. ‘I crave your Majesty’s pardon,’ says Tom, ‘I
-knew you had been led by the nose for so many years, that I felt sure it
-must have become tender and painful.’
-
-But the Jester occasionally carried the jest too far; there was a play
-called ‘The Silent Woman,’ given in London about this time, wherein
-appeared the character of Tom Otter, a henpecked husband, a reputation
-which the Duke of York enjoyed at Court. One night Charles said, ‘I will
-go no more abroad with Tom Otter and his wife.’ Now the courtiers well
-knew that when the King made any slighting allusion to his brother, they
-were expected to be tickled, so there was a general roar. The Jester
-alone looked solemn. ‘I wonder,’ said he, ‘which is best, to play Tom
-Otter to your wife or to your mistress?’—a sally which made Charles very
-angry, for he felt the reference was made to Lady Castlemaine, of whom
-the whole world knew he stood greatly in awe.
-
-Another evening Tom made a comic onslaught on Lord Rochester, and that
-nobleman, actuated perhaps by _jalousie de métier_, was so enraged that
-he dealt the Jester a swinging box on the ear, unmindful of the royal
-presence, and threw the whole Court circle into confusion.
-
-Death alone could put an end to poor Tom’s fooling. He died at his post
-at Whitehall in 1682-3, and then ‘where were his gibes, his gambols, his
-flashes of merriment, that were wont to set the table in a roar? Alas!
-poor Yorick.’
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 43. MISTRESS HERBERT.
-
- _Elizabethan dress. Ruff. Jewelled hat. Auburn hair._
- Inscription—‘_Richard
- Herbert of Blackhall’s wife, being daughter to Newport of Arcole_.’
-
- DIED 1627.
-
- BY ZUCCHERO.
-
-
-HE cannot do better in giving an account of this most remarkable and
-exemplary woman than to quote the words of her distinguished son,
-Edward, tenth Lord Herbert of Cherbury: ‘My mother, Magdalen, was the
-fourth daughter of Sir Richard Newport, by his wife, Margaret, daughter
-and heir of Sir Thomas Bromley, one of the Privy Council, and Executor
-of King Henry the Eighth. She married Richard Herbert, grandson of Sir
-Richard Herbert of Blackhall, County Montgomery, Knight, and surviving
-her husband, gave rare testimonies of an incomparable piety to God and
-love to her children. She was most assiduous and devout in her daily,
-both private and public, prayers, and so careful to provide for her
-posterity, that though it were in her power to give her estate, which
-was very great, to whom she would, yet she continued long unmarried, and
-so provident for them, that after she had bestowed all her daughters
-with sufficient portions upon very good neighbouring families she
-delivered up her estate and care of her housekeeping to her eldest son
-Francis. She had for many years kept hospitality with that plenty and
-order as exceeded all, either of her county or town, for besides
-abundance of provision and good cheer for guests, which her son Sir
-Francis continued, she used ever after dinner to distribute with her own
-hands to the poor, who resorted to her in great numbers. Alms in money
-she gave also, more or less, as she thought they needed it. After my
-mother had lived most virtuously and lovingly with her husband for many
-years (who died in 1597), she after his death erected a fair monument
-for him in Montgomery Church, brought up her children carefully, and put
-them in good courses for making their fortunes, and briefly was that
-woman Dr. Donne has described in his funeral sermon.’
-
-Speaking of his father Lord Herbert says: ‘He was black-haired, and
-bearded, of a manly but somewhat stern look, but withal very handsome;
-compact in his limbs, and of a great courage.’ His grandfather was also
-distinguished for the same quality, and was noted to be a great enemy to
-the outlaws and thieves of his time, who appeared in great numbers in
-the mountains of Montgomeryshire. Lord Herbert also commends his
-grandfather’s extreme hospitality, which caused it to be an ordinary
-saying, if any one saw a fowl rise in the country at that time—‘Fly
-where thou wilt, thou wilt light at Blackhall.’
-
-Mistress Herbert had seven sons, of whom the eldest was the
-aforementioned Lord Herbert of Cherbury, and three daughters. She seems
-to have merited her son’s encomiums. Izaak Walton says of her: ‘She was
-a person of superior abilities, and was highly esteemed for her great
-and harmless wit, cheerful gaiety, and obliging behaviour, which gained
-her a friendship with most of any eminent birth or learning in the
-University of Oxford, where she resided four years during the time of
-her widowhood, in order to superintend the education of her children,
-who were all young at the time of their father’s death. When she had
-provided for them she took to her second husband, Sir John Danvers,
-Knight, brother and heir to Henry, Earl of Danby, who highly valued both
-her person and most excellent endowments of mind. It was Magdalen
-Newport, Mrs. Herbert, and Dame Danvers, who inspired those favourite
-lines of Dr. Donne, Dean of St. Paul’s, so often quoted—
-
- ‘No spring or summer beauty hath such grace
- As I have seen in an autumnal face.’
-
-She lies buried at Chelsea.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 44. THOMAS CROMWELL, EARL OF ESSEX.
-
- _Black and white dress._
-
- BY HOLBEIN.
-
-
-HE was the son of a blacksmith at Putney; his mother, who married again,
-sent him to a small school, where he learned little more than reading,
-writing, and the rudiments of Latin. When quite young he evinced a
-passion for travel, and set out for the Continent with very scanty
-means, which were soon exhausted, and he found himself at Antwerp
-without money or connections of any kind. But he was energetic and
-hard-working, and he soon found employment as a clerk in an English
-factory established in the city. Glad as Cromwell was to earn his
-livelihood, the drudgery and confinement of the life were irksome to the
-eager restless spirit of our young adventurer, and he took advantage of
-the first opportunity to escape. He made acquaintance with some
-countrymen from Boston in Lincolnshire, bound for Rome, in order to
-obtain certain indulgences from the reigning Pope, Julius the Second.
-These men soon became aware that Cromwell’s intelligence and capability
-were likely to make him a valuable fellow-traveller. They therefore
-proposed to convey him to Italy, an offer with which it may be imagined
-Cromwell eagerly closed. At Rome he rose into favour at the Vatican by
-his talent and ability, added to which substantial qualifications our
-young traveller made himself acceptable to the Pope by ministering to
-the well-known tastes of Julius for good living. He is said to have
-instructed the Papal cook in the art of preparing many a delicacy for
-the Pontiff’s table, till then unknown in Rome, especially ‘_some rare
-English jellies, which his Holiness pronounced delicious_.’ Italy was at
-that period the theatre of constant warfare, and Cromwell became not
-only a spectator, but an actor in many of the exciting events, serving
-for a time as trooper in the army of the Duke, afterwards Connétable, de
-Bourbon.
-
-This great commander had left the service of France in disgust, and had
-espoused the cause of Charles the Fifth, Emperor of Germany. A companion
-in arms was John Russell, eventually Earl of Bedford; a man who shone
-alike as a soldier and a diplomatist, and had been employed in the
-latter capacity by Henry the Eighth, and his prime minister, Cardinal
-Wolsey. Being at Bologna a plot was formed to seize his person and send
-him prisoner to Paris, the hotel in which he lodged being already
-guarded by the soldiers of the Gonfaloniere. Thomas Cromwell was also in
-Bologna at that time, and no sooner did he receive intelligence of the
-affair than he went to the municipal authorities representing himself as
-a Neapolitan acquaintance of the English knight, and offering to
-persuade him to give himself up quietly. He thus gained access to
-Russell’s presence, and providing him with the disguise of a peasant
-contrived in the most skilful manner to effect his escape. Russell urged
-his deliverer to accompany him, but Cromwell was not disposed to leave
-Italy so soon, and entered the service of a rich merchant at Venice.
-Cromwell was said to have been present at the battle of Pavia, where
-Francis the First of France was taken prisoner. On his return to
-England, the man whose life and liberty he had saved, came forward to
-lend him a helping hand.
-
-Russell, then in much repute at Court, recommended him to the patronage
-of Wolsey, then in the zenith of his power. The Cardinal took Cromwell
-into his service and confidence, and made him secretary and chief agent
-in the great scheme of the dissolution of the religious houses, which
-was now carrying on, the funds thus raised being ostensibly apportioned
-to defraying the expenses attendant on the erection of the colleges
-which Wolsey was now founding—
-
- ‘Those twin seats of learning,
- Ipswich and Oxford.’
-
-But there were whisperings abroad that much of the money thus obtained
-overflowed into the pockets of ‘master and man,’ a circumstance which
-Cromwell emphatically denied in a conversation with Master George
-Cavendish, one of the Cardinal’s gentlemen, and his eventual biographer.
-The question of Cromwell’s fidelity to his master, when Wolsey fell on
-evil days, has been differently treated by different writers; but there
-is no doubt that when Wolsey left London in disgrace, Cromwell followed
-him to Esher—or Asher, as it is written by Master Cavendish—who tells us
-he went into the great chamber, and to his surprise found Master
-Cromwell standing in the large window, the tears distilling from his
-eyes, with a primer in his hand, praying earnestly,—‘the which was a
-strange sight,’ for it did not appear that the said Master Cromwell was
-by any means given to devotion. Cavendish inquired into the cause of his
-sorrow, asking anxiously if he considered their master’s case to be so
-very hopeless, on which Cromwell, with much candour, confessed that it
-was his own fate he was bewailing, for it seemed most likely that he was
-on the point of losing everything for which he had been travailing all
-the days of his life; moreover, that he was in disdain of all men simply
-for doing his master’s service, through which he had never increased his
-living, on the contrary, had been a heavy loser. Then he confided to
-Master Cavendish how, that very afternoon, when the Cardinal had dined,
-it was his (Cromwell’s) intention to ride with all speed to London, and
-so to Court, ‘where I will either make or mar ere I come back again.’
-Assuredly in the audience which he solicited and obtained did Master
-Cromwell make, and not mar, as far as he himself was concerned. He had a
-long and explicit conversation with the King, into whose favour he
-ingratiated himself by suggesting the very line of conduct on which he
-well knew Henry’s heart was bent. Acquainted with the Monarch’s
-infatuation for Anne Boleyn, he now suggested, as if from his own notion
-of advisability, that the King should throw off all allegiance to the
-Pope, declare himself supreme head of the Church throughout his own
-kingdom, and thus facilitate the much desired measure of his divorce
-from Queen Katherine. Such palatable advice was indeed well calculated
-to win Henry’s good graces, and from that moment Cromwell’s rapid rise
-began. The King, knowing what a valuable auxiliary he had proved to his
-late patron in the matter of the suppression of the religious houses,
-resolved to secure Cromwell’s services for the same purpose. He
-therefore confirmed him in the office of Steward of the Dissolved
-Monasteries, made him a Privy Councillor, a Knight, Secretary of State,
-Master of the Royal Jewel-house, Clerk of the Hanaper (a lucrative post
-in the Court of Chancery), and what Cromwell’s enemies termed ‘the Lord
-knows what.’ In 1535 Visitor-General of the said suppressed monasteries
-throughout the realm, in which capacity Sir Thomas incurred much
-censure, and was branded by many as cruel, rapacious, and overbearing.
-In our judgment of this sentence we must take into consideration the
-fever heat at which religious animosity now stood; suffice it to say
-that Cromwell satisfied the views of his royal master, and was not Henry
-cruel, rapacious, and overbearing? Fabulous sums were extorted from the
-exchequers of these establishments, and it was almost universally
-believed that the favourite came in for a considerable share of the
-booty. It was indeed evident he did not remember the injunction laid
-upon him by Sir Thomas More, namely, that he should advise the King what
-he _ought_ to do, not only what he was _able_ to do. In 1536 he was made
-Privy Seal, and the same year Baron Cromwell of Okeham, County Rutland,
-and (the authority of the Pope being by this time abolished in England)
-Henry instituted a new office, to which he appointed his favourite. This
-was Vicar-General, or in other words, Supreme Head of the Church, as
-representative of the King, in which capacity he sat in the House of
-Lords, and also at Convocation above the Archbishop of Canterbury. The
-office included that of Principal Commissary for the Administration of
-Justice in all ecclesiastical affairs; of the godly reformation, and the
-redress of all errors, heresies, and abuses of the English Reformed
-Church, both in Parliament and Convocation.
-
-It was indeed strange that the man who, a very short time before, had
-professed infidel doctrines (and was so unsettled in his creed that when
-Cavendish found him at prayers, the primer in his hand should be our
-lady’s matins) strange to say that this individual should now come
-forward as the principal pillar of the Reformation. Dr. Hook, in his
-_Lives of the Archbishops of Canterbury_, says, Cromwell ‘was not a real
-Protestant, and was generally supposed to be a man who supported the
-party from which he could obtain most, a statesman whose religion
-depended on politics, and who had no knowledge of theological subjects.’
-Yet from the circumstances in which he was now placed all the English
-Protestants rallied round him, and those of Germany treated with him. In
-his new capacity Cromwell issued the most stringent and binding
-regulations for the conduct of the reformed clergy, was indefatigable in
-propagating the Bible throughout the country, causing it to be read in
-churches, and placed in convenient parts of the building, where the
-parishioners themselves could refer to it on their own account. But
-Cromwell’s life forms part of the history of the reign of Henry the
-Eighth, and indeed of the Reformation itself. And it is incumbent on us
-to condense this narrative lest it exceed the prescribed bounds.
-
-He continued to receive marks of favour from the King, but his keen eye
-detected the gathering clouds in his own future; and he knew if Henry
-once failed him there would be little hope of stemming the tide of
-unpopularity which threatened to overpower him. He well knew that he was
-hated by all classes; the nobility, who grudged all the titles and
-honours bestowed on ‘the blacksmith’s son’; the Roman Catholics, who had
-good reason to detest him; while the reformed clergy rebelled against
-many of the changes and innovations which the Vicar-General had
-instituted in the services and conduct of the Church; and the poorer
-classes were indignant with him for depriving them of the bounty which
-they had so long received from the religious houses. Cromwell had good
-cause to be uneasy. He began by propitiating ‘the poor and needy,’ who
-now flocked by invitation to the gate of his house in Throckmorton
-Street, oftentimes twice a day, where they were regaled with bread and
-meat and money. He then set on foot negotiations with the Protestant
-Princes of Germany, more especially the reigning Duke of Cleves, in
-order to bring about a marriage between that Prince’s sister and Henry
-the Eighth, who was at this moment in one of his transitory intervals of
-widowhood. Lord Cromwell imagined that a Protestant queen of his own
-selection would be an invaluable ally at Court, and help him to retain
-the favour of the King, who was persuaded into the belief that the Lady
-Anne of Cleves was not only ‘fair and portly,’ but comely in face and
-feature, an error in which Henry was confirmed by a very flattering
-portrait from the pencil of Holbein. So the Princess was sent for to
-come over to England, and a magnificent cortége was despatched, with the
-Archbishop of Canterbury himself, to bring her on her way to London; and
-Henry conceived the romantic idea of riding down to Rochester in
-disguise to waylay his bride. Alas! for the eager glance which his Grace
-cast into the travelling coach, where sat a lady tall and portly indeed,
-but coarse and ugly in face and feature! Henry, we are told, was
-‘alarmed and abashed,’ but he also was furious. He felt he had been
-deceived, and he sent for Cromwell and bade him devise some means for
-the prevention of the marriage. It was too late; matters had gone too
-far, and the ceremony was performed.
-
-It would appear that at the time the King did not realise the idea that
-Cromwell was the principal instigator of the hated union, for it was
-after the marriage that he was raised to the Earldom of Essex, and made
-Lord Chamberlain, and his son granted a separate peerage. We know from
-the pages of history how the King’s horror of ‘the Flanders mare’
-increased day by day, and he never rested till he had obtained a
-divorce, soon followed by the downfall of the newly created Earl of
-Essex, whose ruin was resolved on.
-
-The Duke of Norfolk was intrusted with the task of arresting his enemy
-at the Council Board on the opening of Parliament in June 1540, and
-despatching him to the Tower, nor was he loth to carry out the royal
-command. Essex claimed a trial by his Peers, but the privilege was
-denied him. He was condemned, says Dr. Hook, by the iniquitous statute,
-admitting of attainder without trial, a measure of which he was not the
-actual founder, as affirmed by some writers, but the reviver of the
-same, and therefore by many pronounced deserving of his fate.
-
-He was accused of high treason, heresy, embezzlement, and a host of
-other misdemeanours, but there is little doubt the worst offence in
-Henry’s eyes was his instrumentality in promoting the hateful marriage
-with Anne of Cleves.
-
-The only voice that was raised in his behalf was that of Archbishop
-Cranmer, who wrote a most eloquent letter to the King, entreating him to
-spare the life of Lord Essex, but it was unavailing. Cromwell’s
-demeanour in the Tower was very different from that which had
-characterised Sir Thomas More. He addressed the most abject letters to
-Henry, and would have accepted life at almost any price. He wrote ‘with
-a heavy heart and trembling hand,’ and signed himself, ‘Your highness’s
-most humble and wretched prisoner and poor slave, Thomas Cromwell.’
-While underneath the subscription came the words, ‘I cry for mercy,
-mercy, mercy!’
-
-Henry caused the letters to be read to him four times, and at one moment
-showed signs of relenting, but in the end was (as usual) inexorable.
-Four days from the passing of the sentence, Lord Essex was led forth to
-execution, and beheaded on Tower Hill. He made a speech full of loyalty
-and submission to the royal will, words which were thought to have been
-dictated by paternal solicitude for the welfare of his only son. He
-furthermore confessed his sins, repenting that he had ever abandoned the
-Catholic faith to which he now returned, for in that he was resolved to
-die; then kneeling in prayer, ‘he submitted his neck to the executioner,
-who mangled him in a shocking manner.’
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 46. LADY KILLIGREW.
-
- _Standing. White satin gown, dark drapery. Hands crossed.
- Brown curls._
-
- BY VANDYCK.
-
-
-Mistress Cecilia Crofts, maid of honour to the Queen Henrietta Maria?
-
-
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- PRINCIPAL STAIRCASE.
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- PRINCIPAL STAIRCASE.
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-
-
- No. 1. GRACE, COUNTESS OF DYSART.
-
- _Pale yellow dress. Leaning her elbow on a table._
-
- DIED 1744.
-
- BY WRIGHT.
-
-
-SHE was the daughter of Sir Thomas Wilbraham of Woodhey, County Chester,
-by Elizabeth, daughter and sole heir of Edward Mytton, Esq., of
-Weston-under-Lizard, County Stafford. She married, 1680, Lionel
-Tollemache, Earl of Dysart, and, becoming co-heir with her sister, the
-Countess of Bradford, took large estates to her husband’s family. Lady
-Dysart had one son, who died _v.p._, and two daughters.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 2. MARY, WIFE OF RICHARD NEWPORT, SECOND EARL OF BRADFORD.
-
- _Pale yellow dress. Pink drapery. Holding a flower._
-
- BORN 1661, DIED 1737.
-
- BY WRIGHT.
-
-
-SHE was the daughter and co-heir of Sir Thomas Wilbraham of Woodhey,
-County Chester, Bart., by Elizabeth, daughter and co-heir of Edward
-Mytton, Esq. of Weston-under-Lizard, which estate (besides a large
-fortune from her father) Lady Bradford inherited from her mother, and
-brought into the Newport family.
-
-It is seldom the lot of any woman to live continuously in one loved
-home, but Mary Wilbraham was born, married, died, and was buried at
-Weston, where her childhood, youth, the chief part of her married life,
-and the latter days of her widowhood were all passed, and which she
-brought into the Newport family. Francis, Earl of Bradford, and his wife
-were most anxious to secure for their eldest son so desirable a match as
-this young lady presented, not only on account of her noble inheritance,
-but in respect of her amiable qualities and the comeliness of her
-person.
-
-They accordingly made good settlements on Lord Newport to facilitate the
-union. We have a list of the lands and messuages allotted to him, but to
-prove their worth we consider two of them will suffice, at least in
-point of syllables, namely—the Manors of Ginnioneth-ys-Kerdine, and
-Dykewyde, in the county of Cardigan. Lady Bradford had six sons, of whom
-four died without children, and two, Henry and Thomas, succeeded to the
-Earldom, and four daughters, Mary, who died unmarried; Elizabeth, wife
-of James Cocks of Worcester, Esq., ancestor to the present Lord Somers;
-Anne, married to Sir Orlando Bridgeman of Castle Bromwich, County
-Warwick, Bart.; and Diana, married to Algernon Coote, Earl of Mountrath.
-Mary, Countess of Bradford, survived her husband many years, and lies
-buried by his side at Weston. Her loss was deeply mourned by all
-classes, especially by the poor, to whom her charity was unbounded.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 3. RICHARD NEWPORT, SECOND EARL OF BRADFORD.
-
- _Slashed dress of golden brown. White sleeves. Wig._
-
- BORN 1644, DIED 1723.
-
- BY SIR PETER LELY.
-
-
-HE was the eldest son of the first Earl of Bradford, by Lady Diana
-Russell. During his father’s lifetime he represented Shropshire in
-Parliament for many years, and gained great popularity in his county by
-his strenuous support of the Bill of Exclusion, which obtained for him a
-complimentary address signed by every member of the grand jury,
-consisting of all the principal landholders of the neighbourhood. He was
-Privy Councillor in the reigns of Queen Anne and George the First, and
-Lord Lieutenant and _Custos Rotulorum_ for the county of Montgomery. In
-1681 he married the daughter and co-heir of Sir Thomas Wilbraham of
-Woodhey, and Weston-under-Lizard, Bart., by whom he had a numerous
-family. During his father’s lifetime he resided chiefly at
-Eyton-upon-Severn, but in later days he took up his abode at Weston, his
-wife’s inheritance in Staffordshire.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 4. SIR ORLANDO BRIDGEMAN.
-
- _Robes of the Lord-Keeper. Holding the purse. Oval, in a square frame._
-
- BORN 1609, DIED 1674.
-
- BY RILEY.
-
-
-THE son of Dr. John Bridgeman, Bishop of Chester, by Elizabeth, daughter
-of Dr. Helyar, Canon of Exeter, and Archdeacon of Barnstaple. Educated
-by his father until he went to Queens’ College, Cambridge, where he took
-his degree of B.A. in 1623. The following year he entered the Inner
-Temple, and applied himself vigorously to the study of common law, ‘of
-which he became,’ says Lord Campbell, ‘a profound master, caring little
-in comparison for either literature or politics.’ When called to the bar
-he made himself remarkable for his diligent attention to business,
-although he had the expectation of a goodly inheritance from his father.
-At the commencement of the Long Parliament Orlando Bridgeman was
-returned for the borough of Wigan in Lancashire. He voted silently, but,
-with the exception of some measures on which he had conscientious
-scruples, almost invariably for the King. He was also one of the few who
-voted against the attainder of Lord Strafford, in whose behalf he made a
-short but manly appeal. When the civil war broke out Orlando did not
-indeed, as was the case with several lawyers, throw aside the gown for
-the sword; but he went into the north, and in the city of Chester, and
-elsewhere, did the King good service by affording the royal troops all
-the assistance in his power, in cooperation with his father, the Bishop
-of the diocese. Clarendon tells us how ‘the city of Chester remained
-true to his Majesty, influenced thereto by the credit and example of
-Bishop John Bridgeman, and the reputation and dexterity of his son
-Orlando, a lawyer of very good estimation.’ For these proofs of loyalty
-Bridgeman was expelled the House of Commons, and the Bishop’s estates
-sequestrated. But when Charles summoned the members of both Houses that
-had been faithful to him, to his own Parliament at Oxford, Orlando
-Bridgeman took his seat as member for Wigan, in Christchurch Hall, and
-was there nominated by patent (sealed by Lord-Keeper Lyttleton) to the
-post of Attorney-General of the Court of Wards and Liveries, ‘an
-office,’ says Lord Campbell, ‘when actually exercised, of great
-importance and emolument, but now a mere feather in his cap, which
-Parliament would not allow him to wear in their sight. At the time of
-the Treaty of Uxbridge, Bridgeman was chosen one of the Commissioners,
-and was thereto designated by his new title, but the potentates of
-Westminster would not acknowledge the appointment as valid, and treated
-him as plain Orlando Bridgeman.’ When Oxford capitulated to Fairfax, he
-retired to his country house at Morton, where he was joined by the
-Bishop, and afterwards he proceeded privately to London.
-
-During the interregnum he refused to put on his gown or to plead, but
-contented himself with acting as a conveyancer or chamber counsel. Yet
-we are informed that he took great note of passing events, whether
-judicial or political, and though he prudently abstained from any small
-plot hatching in the King’s name, which he considered would be
-prejudicial to the royal cause, yet to the great measures which affected
-the Restoration our lawyer gave his strong adherence, and rejoiced in
-the return of Charles the Second to England. He had quick promotion,
-being made Serjeant-at-Law, Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer, and
-Speaker of the House of Lords in the absence of the Lord Chancellor. His
-conduct on the trial of the regicides has naturally been differently
-judged, according to the bias of party feeling, but at all events his
-eloquence in charging the jury was highly extolled at the time, and when
-he had concluded the applause was so great that Judge Bridgeman felt
-himself called upon to check the expression thereof, saying, ‘that it
-was more suitable for the audience of a stage-play rather than a court
-of justice.’ His language indeed was rather fantastic and flowery, but
-that was the fashion at the time. He explained that ‘the treason of the
-prisoners consisted not only in compassing and imagining the King’s
-death, but in executing him in front of his own palace; in fact, not
-only laying the cockatrice’s egg, but brooding upon the same, until it
-had brought forth a serpent!’ On the expiration of the trials, Bridgeman
-was made a Baronet and Chief-Justice of the Common Pleas; and it was
-said of him that while presiding in this Court his reputation was at its
-zenith, and ‘his moderation and equity were such that he seemed to carry
-a chancery in his breast.’ In the intrigues which were being carried on
-against Lord Clarendon, Sir Orlando took no part; indeed his conduct was
-invariably marked by generosity towards the man whom he was destined to
-supplant, and he did all in his power to prevent the Chancellor’s
-impeachment. In 1667 he was appointed Lord-Keeper at the instigation of
-some of the King’s advisers, male and female, and it was whispered among
-his enemies that in that capacity he was at first more complaisant than
-his predecessor in affixing the great seal to royal grants, in favour of
-such personages as Lady Castlemaine, and others of her calibre. Be this
-as it may, the atrocious proceedings of the Cabal roused the Lord-Keeper
-into resistance, and the opposition he offered to these unscrupulous men
-hastened his downfall. His own family were also most prejudicial to his
-prosperity, his wife being an ‘intriguer and intermeddler,’ combining
-with his sons in matters with which they had no concern. Bridgeman was
-losing favour at Court; he had lately made himself obnoxious to the King
-and his surroundings by opposing many of their measures, and when he
-refused to confirm the Act of Toleration on the ground of illegality,
-Lord Shaftesbury hastened to Charles’s presence bent on mischief, for
-that nobleman had long had his eyes greedily directed towards the Great
-Seal, and he became very eloquent in counting up all Sir Orlando’s
-misdemeanours, ending by his _disinterested_ advice for that minister’s
-instant dismissal. Charles took a little time to be persuaded, but after
-a while he sent off secretary Coventry to demand the bone of contention
-from the Lord-Keeper. Bridgeman was all unprepared for the hasty and
-peremptory message, but he had no option, and the Great Seal was
-delivered to the royal messenger. Charles kept it in his own custody all
-night, and the next morning consigned it with the title of Lord
-Chancellor into the willing hands of Anthony Ashley Cooper. After his
-dismissal from office Sir Orlando retired to his villa near Teddington,
-where he died, and was buried. He was twice married—first to Judith,
-daughter and heir of John Kynaston, Esq. of Morton, County Salop, who
-died at Oxford, during the usurpation, and was there buried. He had an
-only son, Sir John Bridgeman, his successor. Sir Orlando had for his
-second wife, Dorothy, daughter of Dr. Saunders, Provost of Oriel
-College, Oxford, and relict of George Cradock, Esq. of Carsewell Castle,
-County Stafford, by whom he had two sons and one daughter, namely, Sir
-Orlando, created a Baronet; Sir Francis, knighted in 1673, who married
-Susanna, daughter and heir of Sir Richard Barker, Knight, but had no
-children; and Charlotte, married to Sir Thomas Myddleton of Chirk
-Castle.
-
-As must invariably be the case with men in prominent positions, more
-especially in times of great civil, religious, and political struggles,
-Sir Orlando Bridgeman’s character was by turns eulogised and blamed; in
-spite of his loyal services to Charles the First, that King found
-occasion to censure his faithful servant at the time of the Treaty of
-Uxbridge, on a question of religion, ‘having,’ said his Majesty,
-‘expected otherwise from the son of a Bishop.’ Yet Sir Orlando was a
-staunch Churchman. Burnet’s testimony was merely to his judicial
-capacity. He said: ‘Bridgeman’s practice was so entirely in common law
-that he did not seem to understand what equity was.’ Roger North said:
-‘He was a celebrated lawyer, and sat with high esteem in the place of
-Chief-Justice of Common Pleas: the moving him then to the Chancery did
-not contribute to his fame’; while elsewhere we are told ‘he carried a
-chancery in his breast.’ ‘He grew timorous, which was not mended by age;
-he laboured to please everybody, and that is a temper of ill consequence
-in a judge.’ On the other hand, Lord Nottingham writes: ‘It is due to
-the memory of so great a man to mention him with reverence and
-veneration for his learning and integrity.’ While Lord Ellenborough
-extols him as an eminent judge, distinguished by the profundity of his
-learning and the extent of his industry. At all events, there is no
-doubt that the name of Sir Orlando Bridgeman, Lord-Keeper of the Great
-Seal, continues to be honoured, not only in the annals of his own
-family, but in the learned profession of the Law.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 5. JOHN BRIDGEMAN, BISHOP OF CHESTER, FATHER OF THE LORD-KEEPER.
-
- _Black gown and ruff. Shield episcopal. Arms of Chester, impaling
- Bridgeman. Dated 1616. Aged 41._
-
- BORN 1575, DIED 1657-8.
-
- BY JANSEN.
-
-
-EDWARD BRIDGEMAN was the younger son of William Bridgeman of Dean Parva,
-in the county of Gloucester. He settled in the city of Exeter, and was,
-in 1578, High-Sheriff of the said city and the county of Devon. His son
-John was born in Exeter, in a house not far from the palace-gate, which
-seemed an omen of his future dignity. He was a studious boy, and loved
-his books, and was carefully kept at school until it was deemed
-advisable ‘to transplant him to the University,’ when he was entered at
-Magdalen College, Cambridge, of which he became a Fellow, and eventually
-the Master. In 1600, being M.A., he was admitted _ad eundem_ at Oxford,
-and here he attained the degree of Doctor of Divinity, being the
-highest, we are told, ‘a scholar can receive, or the University bestow.’
-Dr. Bridgeman’s character for learning and piety, combined with
-refinement of manners and good breeding, had reached the ears of King
-James the First, who appointed him one of his Domestic Chaplains, and
-soon afterwards he became incumbent of Wigan in Lancashire. For upwards
-of two hundred years, even to the present day, the living in question
-has been held, with scarcely any intermission, by a member of the family
-of Bridgeman. In 1619 the Doctor was raised to the See of Chester, being
-consecrated at Lambeth, at the same time as the Bishops of Oxford and
-Bristol. Now the King taking into consideration that the Bishopric of
-Chester was less lucrative than some others, His Majesty also preferred
-John Bridgeman to the living of Bangor in Wales, which he was to hold
-_ad commendam_, or temporarily. Collins tells us that his Lordship was
-not present in the Upper House, in the year 1641, when the bishops
-protested against the proceedings in Parliament, and were impeached, and
-sent to the Tower, whereby he was saved the tedious imprisonment to
-which his right reverend brethren were subjected. But all his
-proclivities were Royalist, and during the usurpation, his estates being
-sequestrated, he took refuge at his son’s country house at Moreton, near
-Oswestry, in Salop, where he died about the year 1657 or 1658, being
-buried in the neighbouring church of Kinnerley, and not in the Cathedral
-of Chester, as some writers have it.
-
-This worthy Prelate was said to have been ‘as ingenious as he was brave,
-and a great patron of those gifts in others which he himself owned. He,
-moreover, was the father of that great and good man, Sir Orlando
-Bridgeman, the Lord-Keeper, who was a glory to his family, and indeed to
-the country at large.’ The Bishop of Chester married Elizabeth, daughter
-of Dr. Helyar (of a good old Somersetshire family), Canon of Exeter, and
-Archdeacon of Barnstaple, by whom he had five sons—
-
-1. Sir Orlando Bridgeman, afterwards First Baronet, and eventually
-Lord-Keeper.
-
-2. Dove, Prebendary of Chester, married Miss Bennet of Cheshire (who
-survived him), by whom he had one son, Charles, Archdeacon of Richmond,
-in Yorkshire, who died unmarried 1678. The widow of Dove Bridgeman
-married, as her second husband, Dr. John Halkett, Bishop of Lichfield.
-
-3. Henry Bridgeman, who was indeed rich in church preferment, being
-successively Rector of Bangor and Barrow, and Bishop of the Isle of Man.
-He married Catherine, daughter of Robert Lever, of Lancashire, Gent., by
-whom he had one daughter, who married Sir Thomas Greenhalgh of
-Brundlesham, County Lancaster.
-
-4. Sir James Bridgeman, Knight, who married the daughter of one Mr.
-Allen, a gentleman of Cheshire, by whom he had (beside a son and
-daughter, who died unmarried) Frances, wife of William, Lord Howard of
-Escrick, and Magdalen, wife of William Wynder, Esq.
-
-5. Richard, a merchant in Amsterdam, married the daughter of one Mr.
-Watson, also an English merchant in that city, by whom he had a
-daughter, Elizabeth, married to John Dove, Surveyor of the Customs; and
-a son, William, of Westminster, some time Secretary of the Admiralty,
-and one of the Clerks of the Privy Council, who married Diana, daughter
-of Mr. Vernatti, an Italian gentleman. Their children were Orlando, and
-Catherine, married to a relative, son of Sir John Bridgeman, Bart.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 6. SIR ORLANDO BRIDGEMAN, FOURTH BARONET.
-
- _Blue coat. Red overcoat. Wig._
-
- DIED 1764.
-
- BY VANDERBANK.
-
-
-HE was the son and successor of Sir John Bridgeman, third Baronet, by
-Ursula Matthews. He married Lady Anne Newport, daughter and co-heir of
-Richard, second Earl of Bradford, who, beside a large fortune, brought
-the beautiful estate of Weston into the Bridgeman family. Sir Orlando
-was for some time M.P. for Shrewsbury.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 7. HENRY NEWPORT, VISCOUNT NEWPORT, AFTERWARDS THIRD EARL OF
- BRADFORD.
-
- _Red coat. Silver brandebourgs._
-
- DIED 1734.
-
- BY DAHL.
-
-
-HE was the eldest son of Richard Newport, second Earl of Bradford, by
-Mary Wilbraham. He represented Shropshire in several Parliaments during
-his father’s life, and was at different times Lord-Lieutenant and
-_Custos Rotulorum_ of the Counties of Stafford, Shropshire, and
-Montgomery. Lord Bradford died unmarried at his house in St. James’s
-Place, and was buried in Henry the Seventh’s Chapel at Westminster.
-
-He was succeeded in his titles, and such estates as he could not
-alienate, by his brother Thomas, who had become imbecile through a fall
-from his horse in early life in Cowhay Wood, Weston Park. He was
-incompetent to manage his own affairs, and, dying at Weston, 1762, his
-titles became extinct, and his property descended to his nephews, the
-sons of Lady Anne Bridgeman; and the Countess of Mountrath. Henry, Lord
-Bradford was an immoral and vindictive man, and having quarrelled with
-his mother on account of her endeavour to disentangle him from some
-disgraceful connection, he vowed vengeance on her and her whole family.
-This threat he carried out in a shameful manner, and though the story is
-long and complicated, yet it bears so nearly on the fortunes of the
-present possessor of Weston, that we cannot refrain from entering into
-details. In 1715, Lord Bradford cut off and debarred all the then
-existing entails of the family estates over which he had any power, and
-in 1730 he made a will by which he left all his large estates in trust,
-for the use of John Newport, _alias_ Harrison, _alias_ Smyth, his
-illegitimate son by Anne, wife of Ralph Smyth, son of the Dean of
-Raphoe, that lady being then Lord Bradford’s mistress; the property to
-revert to the testator’s lawful heirs in the event of the aforementioned
-John’s death without children. But two days afterwards he repented of
-this partial act of compensation, and added a codicil by which he left
-the same property to the same trustees, in case of John’s death without
-heirs, to his mother, Mrs. Anne Smyth, for her own personal use, to be
-devised as she saw fit, provided that during John’s lifetime she should
-set aside a proper sum for his use and maintenance, after which she
-might make any use she chose of the residue. Four days afterwards
-another codicil assured the lady in question a further sum of £10,000.
-
-Lord Bradford died in 1734, and Mrs. Anne Smyth in 1742, having two
-months before her death made a will leaving all the property bequeathed
-her by the said Earl to one Alexander Small, a surgeon (excepting as
-before what was set aside for the maintenance of John Newport), until
-John should have attained his majority, which was not to be until he was
-twenty-six years old. In the event of John Newport’s death without
-children, then the reversion and inheritance of the said estates she
-devised to William Pulteney, afterwards Earl of Bath, his heirs and
-assigns for ever. It would be tedious to relate all the legal
-proceedings which arose out of this eccentric will; suffice it to say
-that it could not be proved till 1751, nine years after the death of the
-testatrix. Lord Bath on his part devised the reversion of the property
-expectant on the death of John Newport, to his brother, General Harry
-Pulteney, who in turn devised it to the daughter of his cousin-german
-(Daniel Pulteney), Frances, wife of William Johnstone, and her said
-husband (who afterwards became a baronet, and took the name of
-Pulteney), and to their heirs in tail male, with remainder to Harry,
-Earl of Darlington, whose grandmother was Anne Pulteney, aunt to the
-Earl of Bath, and daughter of Sir William Pulteney of Misterton, County
-Leicester and his sons in tail male.
-
-All these aforementioned legatees died in succession without male heirs,
-excepting the Earl of Darlington, who left an only son, afterwards Duke
-of Cleveland, on whom the whole of this enormous fortune devolved, and
-is part of the heritage of the present Duke (1888). Thus the ancient
-estates of the Newports, including those which descended to them from
-the Princes of South Wales, passed away from the rightful owners,
-excepting Weston-under-Lizard, Walsall, and some other estates elsewhere
-mentioned, which became the property of Sir Henry Bridgeman, grandson of
-Mary, Countess of Bradford. The savings from the estate during the
-lifetime of John Newport, which were said to exceed £200,000, were
-ultimately divided (after deducting the great law charges) between the
-Crown (to which it passed in default of heirs), and, through a
-ridiculous quibble of the law, the representatives of Ralph Smyth (John
-Newport’s mother’s husband).
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 8. LADY ANNE BRIDGEMAN.
-
- _White satin dress. Leaning her arm on a table. Fair hair._
-
- BORN 1690, DIED 1752.
-
- BY VANDERBANK.
-
-
-SHE was the third daughter of Richard Newport, second Earl of Bradford,
-by Mary Wilbraham. She married Sir Orlando Bridgeman of Castle Bromwich,
-Bart., by whom she had (besides a daughter and two sons who died young)
-Sir Henry, who succeeded his father, and Diana, married to John
-Sawbridge of Ollantigh, in Kent. This lady’s descendants are now the
-only representatives of the ancient family of Newport.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 9. HENRY, FOURTH LORD HERBERT OF RIPSFORD.
-
- DIED 1691.
-
- BY WISSING.
-
-
-EDWARD, first Lord Herbert of Ripsford, the ‘noble author’ of whom
-Horace Walpole speaks in terms of the highest enthusiasm, and whose
-autobiography he published, was succeeded by his son Richard, who
-married a daughter of John, Earl of Bridgewater, by whom he had two
-surviving sons (who in turn succeeded to the title) and two daughters.
-The youngest, Florence, married her kinsman, Richard Herbert of Oakley
-Park. Edward, third Lord Herbert of Cherbury, a zealous loyalist, dying
-without children by either of his three wives, the titles and estates
-devolved on his brother Henry, who married Lady Catherine Newport,
-daughter of Francis, first Earl of Bradford. On the fourth Lord’s
-decease _s.p._, the title became extinct, but the dignity of Herbert of
-Cherbury was revived in favour of his nephew (son of his sister
-Florence), Henry Arthur Herbert, afterwards Earl of Powis, in 1743.
-
-Catherine Newport, Lady Herbert, survived her husband, and resided till
-her death at Lymore in Montgomeryshire, the considerable estate
-belonging to Herbert which had been appointed her as her jointure. She
-was remarkable for her extensive charities.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 10. SIR JOHN BRIDGEMAN, SECOND BART.
-
- _Red dress. Holding a jewelled sword._
-
- BORN 1630, DIED 1710.
-
- BY VICTOR.
-
-
-HE was the eldest son of Sir Orlando Bridgeman, Lord-Keeper, and the
-only child by that gentleman’s ‘first venter’ (so runs a line in the
-learned gentleman’s biography), Judith, daughter and heir of John
-Kynaston of Morton, in Shropshire, Esq. He married Mary, daughter and
-heir of George Cradock of Carsewell Castle, in Staffordshire, whose
-widow married Sir Orlando as his second wife. By this alliance John
-Bridgeman’s mother-in-law became his step-mother, a singular
-relationship. He had four sons, three of whom died unmarried; the two
-who survived him were John, his namesake and successor, and Orlando,
-married to Catherine, daughter of William Bridgeman of Comb, County
-Suffolk, Esq. The daughters were Mary, married to Robert Lloyd, Esq. of
-Aston, in Shropshire; Judith, married to Richard Corbet of Morton
-Corbet, County Shropshire; Dorothy, wife of Lisle Hackett of Moxhull,
-County Warwick; and three others who died unmarried. Sir John died at
-his own house of Castle Bromwich, but was buried at Aston, in
-Warwickshire.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 11. FRANCIS NEWPORT, SECOND LORD NEWPORT, AND FIRST EARL OF
- BRADFORD.
-
- _Blue mantle. Long wig._
-
- BORN 1619, DIED 1708.
-
- BY DAHL.
-
-
-HE was the eldest son of Sir Richard Newport, Kt. of High Ercall, who
-was knighted by King James the First, at Theobalds, and, in 1642, in
-consequence of his unswerving loyalty to King Charles the First, created
-Baron Newport. Sir Richard married Rachel, daughter of Sir John Leveson,
-Kt. of Haling, or Halington, County Kent, and sister to Sir Richard
-Leveson of Trentham, County Stafford, Knight of the Bath. Francis was
-the first born of a large family, and began public life at an early age,
-being chosen to represent the borough of Shrewsbury in Parliament, a few
-days after he had attained his majority. He was one of the few members
-(fifty-six in number) who had the courage to vote for the acquittal of
-Lord Strafford, a proceeding which brought down on the heads of the
-so-called ‘Straffordians’ both insult and obloquy. He followed in the
-footsteps of his father, declared for the Royal cause in the unhappy
-differences between Charles and his Parliament, and was soon expelled
-the House of Commons as a ‘malignant.’ He took arms in the Royal army,
-and did gallant service in the field, till he was made prisoner at
-Oswestry, when that town was taken by the Earl of Denbigh and Colonel
-Mytton. At the time of the insurrection in North Wales, Francis Newport
-proved himself a zealous friend to Charles the Second, and as powerful
-as he was zealous. He was also engaged in the unsuccessful siege of
-Shrewsbury, which town, in the beginning of the ensuing year, was once
-more in the hands of the Royalists. On this occasion, as we have
-mentioned elsewhere, Sir Edward Hyde (Lord Clarendon) was sorely puzzled
-as to the respective claims to the Governorship of Shrewsbury, between
-Sir Thomas Myddleton, and his friend, Francis Newport. Two months after
-the restoration of the King (May 29, 1660), Lord Newport was appointed
-Lord-Lieutenant and _Custos Rotulorum_ of Shropshire, and later on, by
-Charles the Second, Comptroller and Treasurer of the Household, and a
-Privy Councillor. In 1674 he was advanced to the title of Viscount
-Newport of Bradford, County Salop, and, on the accession of James the
-Second, his lordship was continued in all his former offices for a time,
-but he was a true patriot, and the arbitrary and unconstitutional
-measures of the new King called forth in him a vigorous opposition. So
-open was he in the expression of his political opinions that he was not
-only superseded in all his offices at Court, but was also removed from
-the Lord-Lieutenancy of Shropshire, which was given up to the unworthy
-hands of the Lord Chancellor Jefferies. He upheld the cause of religion
-at the trial of the seven Bishops, and, being a firm Protestant, he
-voted for the succession of the Prince and Princess of Orange. On the
-day that William and Mary were proclaimed, Lord Newport was reinstated
-in his posts in the Royal Household and his Lord-Lieutenancy of
-Shropshire, in all of which offices he continued until he attained the
-age of eighty-four, when they devolved on his son. In 1694 he was
-created Earl of Bradford, and on the accession of Queen Anne again sworn
-of the Privy Council. Lord Newport was an object of special dislike to
-James the Second, as we find from one of the ex-King’s declarations
-(respecting a projected descent upon England), that this nobleman would
-certainly be debarred from all hope of pardon. Lord Bradford died at
-Twickenham in his eighty-ninth year, and was buried at Wroxeter, near
-his country house of Eyton, in Shropshire, where a marble monument on
-the south wall of the chancel bears a long inscription to his memory. It
-was written of him that ‘at the time of his death, he was the most
-venerable character of any nobleman in England, on account of his
-virtues, and the unblemished honour with which he had filled every
-station of life. Equally a friend to the clergy and to the poor, having
-enlarged the endowments of several poor vicarages, and erected a
-charitable foundation at Ercall for the support of the needy.’ King
-William had so great a regard for the Earl of Bradford, that he paid him
-a visit, and honoured him with his presence at dinner on his eightieth
-birthday. He married Lady Diana Russell, daughter of the fourth Earl of
-Bedford, by whom he had a large family, five dying in their infancy; and
-
-Richard, second Earl of Bradford;
-
-Francis, who died unmarried;
-
-Thomas, a Commissioner of the Customs in the reigns of William and Mary,
-and Queen Anne, who, in the first year of George the First was made a
-Lord of the Treasury and raised to the peerage by the title of Baron
-Torrington of Torrington, County Devon, and sworn of the Privy Council.
-He was also at the time of his death a Teller of the Exchequer. He had
-three wives: first, Lucy, daughter of Sir Edward Atkyns, Lord Chief
-Justice of the Exchequer in the time of James the Second; second,
-Penelope, daughter of Sir Orlando Bridgeman of Ridley, County Chester,
-Bart., who died in 1705; third, Anne, daughter of Robert Pierrepoint of
-Nottingham, Esq., son of Francis Pierrepoint, and grandson of Robert,
-Earl of Kingston. He died the 27th of May 1719, in the sixty-fifth year
-of his age (when his title became extinct), and lies buried at Wroxeter
-with Anne, his third wife, who survived him many years, and died on the
-7th February 1734.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 12. LADY WILBRAHAM.
-
- _Pale yellow dress. Grey drapery. Pointing to a tulip._
-
- BY SIR PETER LELY.
-
-
-ELIZABETH, daughter and sole heir of Edward Mytton, Esq. of
-Weston-under-Lizard, which place he inherited through females from the
-ancient possessors. She married Sir Thomas Wilbraham of Woodhey, Bart.,
-by whom she had three daughters, co-heiresses, who each inherited a
-large property, both landed and funded, from both parents. They were,
-Charlotte, wife of Sir Thomas Myddleton of Chirk Castle; Mary, Countess
-of Bradford; and Grace, Countess of Dysart.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 13. SIR THOMAS WILBRAHAM, BART.
-
- _Red coat. Blue mantle._
-
- BY VERELST.
-
-
-THE family of Wilbraham, or, as it was formerly written, Wilburgham,
-derived its name from a manor in Cambridgeshire, where it was settled in
-the reign of Henry the Second. They afterwards removed to Cheshire,
-where they became much respected and very influential. The subject of
-the present notice was the son of Sir Thomas Wilbraham, of Woodhey,
-County Chester, by the daughter of Sir Roger Wilbraham of Bridgemoor, in
-the same county. He married the daughter and sole heir of Edward Mytton,
-Esq., of Weston-under-Lizard, by whom he had three daughters,
-co-heiresses. The direct male line of a very ancient Cheshire family
-ended in the person of Sir Thomas Wilbraham.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 14. SIR JOHN BRIDGEMAN, THIRD BARONET.
-
- _As a youth. Blue and gold dress._
-
- DIED 1747.
-
- BY VICTOR.
-
-
-HE was the son of Sir John Bridgeman, second baronet (the only son of
-the Lord-Keeper by his ‘first venter,’ so runs an old biography), by the
-daughter and co-heir of George Cradock of Carsewell, County Stafford. He
-was the eldest surviving of many children, and married Ursula, daughter
-and sole heir of Roger Matthews of Blodwell, County Salop; by whom he
-had a large family, both sons and daughters, of whom only two survived,
-namely, Orlando, his successor, and a daughter, married to Hugh
-Williams, Esq.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- _No._ 15. FAMILY GROUP.
-
-HENRY BRIDGEMAN, _first Lord Bradford_; _yellow dress, hat and
-feathers_. LADY BRADFORD, _in green_. _The eldest daughter in a pink
-gown, playing the harpsichord._ _Her sister in a white gown, playing the
-harp._ ORLANDO _in red_. JOHN _in blue_. GEORGE _sitting on the step
-near the pianoforte_.
-
- BY PINE.
-
- SIR HENRY BRIDGEMAN, BART., FIRST BARON BRADFORD.
-
- BORN 1725, DIED 1800.
-
-
-THE eldest surviving son of Sir Orlando Bridgeman, by Lady Anne Newport,
-daughter of the second Earl of Bradford. He sat in Parliament for many
-years, and in 1794 was advanced to the Peerage, as Baron Bradford of
-Bradford, County Salop. He married Elizabeth, daughter and heir of John
-Simpson, Esq., by whom he had a large family. His wife, three sons, and
-two daughters are represented in this group, namely, Orlando, his
-successor, John (Bridgeman Simpson), George, Rector of Wigan. The
-daughters married Henry Greswolde Lewis of Malvern Hall, Esq., and Sir
-George William Gunning, Bart.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 16. THE HONOURABLE MRS. GUNNING.
-
- _White lace cap, and fichu._
-
- BORN 1764, DIED 1810.
-
- BY HOPPNER.
-
-
-SHE was the younger daughter of Henry Bridgeman, first Lord Bradford, by
-Miss Simpson; married in 1794 George William, only son of Sir Robert
-Gunning of Horton, County North Hants, by whom she had several children.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 17. ELIZABETH, WIFE OF JOHN BRIDGEMAN, BISHOP OF CHESTER.
-
- _Black dress. Cap._
-
- DIED 1636.
-
- AFTER JANSEN.
-
-
-SHE was the daughter of Dr. Helyar, Canon of Exeter and Archdeacon of
-Barnstaple, of an ancient family in Somersetshire. She married John
-Bridgeman, Bishop of Chester, famed alike for his piety and his loyalty,
-by whom she was the mother of five sons:—1. Sir Orlando, afterwards
-Lord-Keeper; 2. Dove, Prebendary of the Cathedral Church of Chester; 3.
-Henry, Dean of Chester; 4. Sir James, Knight; 5. Richard, a merchant in
-Amsterdam, whose grand-daughter married her kinsman, Orlando Bridgeman,
-fourth son of the second Baronet, and grandson of the Lord-Keeper.
-
-Mrs. Bridgeman was buried in Chester Cathedral.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 19. ORLANDO BRIDGEMAN, ESQUIRE.
-
- _Black coat. Blue overcoat on left arm. Long black wig._
-
- BORN 1671, DIED 1721.
-
- BY DAHL.
-
-
-HE was the fifth son of Sir John Bridgeman, second Baronet, by Mary,
-daughter of George Cradock, Esquire, of Carsewell Castle, County
-Stafford. Orlando was M.P. for Wigan, and married his cousin Katherine,
-daughter of William Bridgeman, Esquire of Coombes, Secretary to the
-Admiralty.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 20. CHARLOTTE BRIDGEMAN.
-
- _As a child. In a white frock. With an Italian greyhound._
-
- BORN 1761, DIED 1802.
-
-
-DAUGHTER of Henry, first Lord Bradford, afterwards the Honourable Mrs.
-Greswolde Lewis.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 21. VISCOUNTESS TORRINGTON.
-
- _Brown gown. Black mob cap._
-
- BORN 1744, DIED 1792.
-
- BY GAINSBOROUGH.
-
-
-SHE was the daughter of John Boyle, Earl of Cork and Orrery, by his
-second wife, Margaret Hamilton of Caledon, County Tyrone. She married,
-in 1765, George, fourth Viscount Torrington, by whom she had four
-daughters—Lady John Russell, the Countess of Bradford, the Marchioness
-of Bath, and Emily, married to Henry, eldest son of Lord Robert Seymour.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 22. LIONEL TOLLEMACHE, SECOND EARL OF DYSART.
-
- _Brown dress. Wig._
-
- BORN 1648, DIED 1727.
-
- BY RILEY.
-
-
-HE was the son of Sir Lionel Tollemache of Helmingham, County Norfolk,
-by Lady Elizabeth Murray, elder daughter and heir of William Murray,
-Lord Huntingtower, first Earl of Dysart. These honours were conferred on
-William Murray, a member of a younger branch of the house of
-Tullibardine by Charles the First, with remainder to heirs male and
-female. His eldest daughter, Elizabeth, married Sir Lionel Tollemache,
-and succeeded her father as Countess of Dysart in her own right, having
-obtained from Charles the Second, in 1670, a confirmation of her
-honours, with a clause in the charter allowing her to nominate any one
-of her children she pleased as her heir. After the death of Sir Lionel
-Tollemache, his widow married the Duke of Lauderdale, and dying in 1697
-was succeeded by her eldest son, Sir Lionel Tollemache, as Lord
-Huntingtower and Earl of Dysart. He was M.P. for Orford in 1678 and
-1685, and represented the County of Suffolk until he was incapacitated
-from sitting in the House by the passing of the Act of Union with
-Scotland. He had declined an English barony upon the accession of Queen
-Anne. He married, in 1680, Grace, daughter and co-heir of Sir Thomas
-Wilbraham, by whom he had a son and two daughters. The eldest son, who
-married Miss Cavendish, died _v.p._, and their son succeeded his
-grandfather as Earl of Dysart.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 23. PORTRAIT OF A YOUNG LADY. UNKNOWN.
-
- BY MRS. BEALE.
-
-
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-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- CIRCULAR STAIRCASE.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
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-
-
-
-
- CIRCULAR STAIRCASE.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 1. HENRY RICH, EARL OF HOLLAND.
-
- _Cuirass. White sleeves embroidered in gold. Lace collar. Belt over
- right,
- Ribbon over left shoulder._
-
- EXECUTED 1649.
-
- BY H. STONE.
-
-
-THE second son of Robert Rich, first Earl of Warwick, by Lady Penelope
-Devereux, daughter of Walter, Earl of Essex. He went to France and
-Holland in his youth, and returning to England appeared at Court, where
-he attracted the notice and favour of George, Duke of Buckingham, who
-was then all-powerful with King James the First. It appears to have been
-through Buckingham’s intervention that he married the rich heiress of
-Sir John Cope of Kensington, of which place Rich shortly bore the title
-of Baron. He also held offices at Court about the King’s person, and
-that of Henry Prince of Wales; was made Earl of Holland, Knight of the
-Garter, Privy Councillor, and sent Ambassador to negotiate the marriage
-of Prince Charles, first in Spain and afterwards in France. On the
-latter occasion it was rumoured that his beauty and courtliness made a
-deep impression on the heart of his future Queen, Henrietta Maria.
-Clarendon says of him that ‘he was of a lovely and winning presence, and
-genteel conversation.’ He also accompanied the Duke of Buckingham to
-Holland on a diplomatic mission. On the first breaking out of an
-insurrection of the Scots, he was made General of the Horse, and though
-not in arms at the commencement of the Civil War, when evil days fell on
-the King, Lord Holland joined him with many other loyal noblemen, and on
-his being appointed General of the Royal army, numbers flocked to ask
-commissions from him. In 1648, after many fluctuations of fortune, he
-was pursued and taken prisoner near St. Neot’s in Huntingdonshire,
-whence he was conveyed to Warwick House, and finally to the Tower, and a
-High Court of Justice was appointed to sit for the trial of the Earl of
-Holland, the Duke of Hamilton, and other Peers. He was in ill-health at
-the time, and when examined answered little, ‘as a man who would rather
-receive his life from their favour than from the strength of his
-defence.’ He was condemned, however, in spite of the influence of his
-brother, the Earl of Warwick, and the exertions of the Presbyterian
-party. There was not a large majority against him, but Cromwell, it
-would appear, disliked him extremely, and accordingly on the 9th of
-March 1649, Lord Holland suffered death immediately after the Duke of
-Hamilton.
-
-Spent by long sickness, he addressed but few words to the people,
-recommending them with his last breath to uphold the King’s government
-and the established religion.
-
-He left four sons and five daughters. Robert, the eldest, succeeded to
-his father’s honours, and likewise to the Earldom of Warwick on the
-death of his uncle in 1672.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 2. FRANCIS NEWPORT, FIRST EARL OF BRADFORD.
-
- _Blue dress. Long wig._
-
- DIED 1708, AGED 88.
-
- AFTER DAHL.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 3. HENRI DE LA TOUR D’AUVERGNE, MARSHAL TURENNE.
-
- _Brown dress. Armour._
-
- BORN 1611, KILLED IN ACTION 1675.
-
-
-THE second son of the Duke de Bouillon, by Elizabeth of Nassau, daughter
-of William the Silent and Charlotte de Montpensier. His father being one
-of the chief Calvinist leaders, brought up his two sons, the Prince de
-Sedan and the Vicomte de Turenne, in the most rigid tenets of that
-party. From early childhood young Turenne had set his heart on becoming
-a soldier, and many interesting anecdotes are recorded of his boyish
-enthusiasm. His military exploits, his daring gallantry and skill as a
-commander, have made his name world-renowned, and the battles that he
-won, the wonderful vicissitudes of his career, both political and
-military, belong to the pages of European history.
-
-He was killed by a stray shot at the beginning of an engagement with the
-Imperialist troops near the village of Salzbach. His death was deeply
-deplored by his soldiery, of whom he was the idol, and caused general
-consternation in Paris. Madame de Sévigné in one of her letters gives a
-most graphic account of the effect produced by the news of his death at
-Court, which, for a time, suspended the usual routine of festivity.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
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-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- EAST STAIRCASE.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
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-
-
-
-
- EAST STAIRCASE.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 2. LORD LYNEDOCH.
-
- _Black coat. Fur collar. White waistcoat. Cutlass under left arm._
-
- DIED 1843.
-
- BY SIR GEORGE HAYTER.
-
-
-THOMAS GRAHAM of Balgowan, created Baron Lynedoch in 1814, having
-distinguished himself by his services in the Peninsular War, more
-especially at the victory of Barossa, in 1811. He married, in 1774, the
-Honourable Mary Cathcart, daughter of Charles, ninth Lord Cathcart, who
-died in 1792. They had no children, and on the death of Lord Lynedoch,
-the title became extinct, and the estate of Balgowan devolved upon his
-kinsman, Robert Graham, Esq.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 5. PORTRAIT OF A LADY. UNKNOWN.
-
- _Pale grey and green dress. Holding a nosegay. Red curtains._
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 6. GEORGE A. F. H. BRIDGEMAN, VISCOUNT NEWPORT, AFTERWARDS SECOND
- EARL OF BRADFORD.
-
- _Brown coat. Fur collar. White neckcloth._
-
- BORN 1789, DIED 1865.
-
- BY SIR GEORGE HAYTER.
-
-
-HE was the son of the first Earl of Bradford of the Bridgeman family, by
-the Hon. Lucy Byng. He married as his first wife, in 1818, Georgina,
-only daughter of Sir Thomas Moncreiffe, Bart., of Moncreiffe, by whom he
-had Orlando George, his successor, the present Earl; the Hon. and Rev.
-George Bridgeman, rector of Wigan; the Hon. and Rev. John Bridgeman,
-rector of Weston; and four daughters. Lady Bradford died in 1842, and
-the Earl married, secondly, Helen, widow of Sir David Moncreiffe, Bart.,
-and daughter of Æneas Mackay, Esq. of Scotston, Peebles. She died in
-1869.
-
-Without taking an active part in politics, his principles were those of
-a staunch Conservative. He was an excellent landlord, and took delight
-in enlarging and improving his property. In his family he was beloved;
-in his household highly respected. He wrote a book entitled _Letters
-from Portugal, Spain, and Sicily_, when he travelled to those countries,
-accompanied by Lord John Russell and the Hon. Robert Clive, in 1812.
-This volume was privately printed in 1875 by his son, the present Earl,
-and showed him to have been a man of culture and refinement of taste,
-more especially in points of art and literature. In both branches he
-distinguished himself as a collector. The Vicar of Tong, who had known
-Lord Bradford intimately for upwards of twenty years, in a speech made
-at a public dinner, speaks in the highest terms of his deceased patron,
-of his unaffected piety and of his profound sense of justice, and holds
-him up as an example to the surviving generation.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 7. MARQUESS OF DALHOUSIE.
-
- _Black coat. Ribbon. Order of the Thistle, and Star._
-
- BORN 1812, DIED 1860.
-
- BY CLARK AFTER SIR J. WATSON GORDON.
-
-
-JAMES ANDREW RAMSAY was the third but eldest surviving son of George,
-ninth Earl of Dalhousie, by Christian, daughter of Charles Broun, Esq.
-of Colstoun, Haddingtonshire. He married, in 1836, Lady Susan Georgiana,
-daughter of George, Marquess of Tweeddale, and by her (who died on her
-voyage home from India in 1853) had two daughters. Lord Dalhousie was
-appointed Governor-General of India in 1847, and retained that office
-till 1856. He was created Marquess of Dalhousie of Dalhousie Castle, and
-of the Punjab, for his eminent services in 1849.
-
-On his death in 1860, the Marquessate became extinct, and he was
-succeeded in the Earldom by his cousin.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 8. ORLANDO GEORGE CHARLES BRIDGEMAN, THIRD AND PRESENT EARL OF
- BRADFORD.
-
- _Full-length. Black velvet coat. Blue tie. Boots and spurs. Riding-whip.
- Black retriever at his feet. Background landscape._
-
- BORN 1819.
-
- BY SIR FRANCIS GRANT.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 13. THE DUKE OF WELLINGTON.
-
- _Oval. Dark cloak. White neckcloth._
-
- BORN 1769, DIED 1852.
-
- BY SIR GEORGE HAYTER.
-
-
-THE Iron Duke, the hero of the Peninsular War and Waterloo, warrior,
-patriot, statesman. His biography belongs to the annals of his country.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- BEDROOMS.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- BEDROOM A.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 3. MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS.
-
- _Red dress, embroidered. Pearls and cross. Jewels in her hair._
-
- AFTER ZUCCHERO.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 6. MARY YATES.
-
-_An old woman in a white cap looking out of an oval stone window. She
- holds a board on which is inscribed ‘Mary Yates, aged 127 years.
- Born at Wheaton Aston, in Staffordshire. She enjoyed her senses till
- her death, but she was helpless five years before she died, which
- was in August 1776. G.B.I._’ ‘_Colombo pinxit._’
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 7. ELIZABETH, LADY BRADFORD.
-
- _In crayons. Seated in a landscape. Red habit. Blue waistcoat.
- With a little dog beside her._
-
- DIED 1806.
-
-
-SHE was the daughter and heir of the Rev. John Simpson, and married in
-1755 Sir Henry Bridgeman, afterwards created in 1794 Baron Bradford.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 8. HENRY, LORD BRADFORD.
-
- _Blue coat. White vest. Powder. Black retriever. In crayons._
-
- DIED 1800.
-
-
-HE was the only son of Sir Orlando Bridgeman by Lady Ann Newport. In Sir
-Henry’s person the title of Bradford was revived, he being, in 1794,
-created Baron Bradford. He married Elizabeth Simpson, who survived him,
-and had by her four sons.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 10. LUCY BYNG, DOWAGER COUNTESS OF BRADFORD.
-
- _Crayons. A head. She wears a bonnet, with her hair in curls._
-
- DIED 1844.
-
- BY SIR WILLIAM ROSS.
-
-
-SHE was the daughter of George Byng, fourth Viscount Torrington, by Lady
-Lucy Boyle. She married, in 1788, Orlando Bridgeman, afterwards first
-Earl of Bradford, who died in 1825.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 11. HAMET BEN HAMET.
-
- _In Oriental costume._
-
- BY SIR GODFREY KNELLER.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 13. HON. MRS. BRIDGEMAN SIMPSON.
-
- _High white dress and blue sash. Powder. Large hat._
-
- DIED 1791.
-
-
-SHE was the only daughter of Sir Thomas Worsley of Appuldercombe, Isle
-of Wight, and married, in 1784, the Hon, John Bridgeman (son of Henry,
-the first Baron Bradford), who had assumed the surname of Simpson in
-right of his mother, and had three children—a son and daughter who died
-young, and Henrietta, heiress of her uncle, Sir Richard Worsley.
-Henrietta married Lord Yarborough.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 14. SIR THOMAS MONCREIFFE, SEVENTH BARONET, AND HIS SISTER.
-
- _Two children seated. The girl’s arm round her brother’s neck.
- Background,
- landscape. White dress. Blue sash. Holding flowers._
-
- BORN 1822, DIED 1879.
-
- BY SIR WILLIAM ROSS.
-
-
-HE was the son of Sir David Moncreiffe, sixth Baronet, by Helen,
-daughter of Æneas Mackay, Esq. of Scotston, and succeeded to his father
-as seventh baronet in 1830. Sir Thomas married, in 1843, Lady Louisa
-Hay, daughter of the tenth Earl of Kinnoull, by whom he had a very large
-family.
-
-His sister Helen married, in 1844, Edmund Wright, Esq. of Halston,
-Shropshire, and died in 1874.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- BEDROOM B.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- _No._ 1. THE QUEEN (WHOM GOD PRESERVE!).
-
- _Half-length. Black dress. White cap._
-
- BY J. BLAKE WIRGMAN.
-
-
-PAINTED at Osborne by Her Majesty’s special permission for the Earl of
-Bradford.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 3. CAPTAIN THOMAS MORTIMER, ADJUTANT, SHROPSHIRE MILITIA.
-
- _Red uniform. Gold epaulettes. Grey hair._
-
- BY J. WEAVER, 1819.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 4. THE DUKE OF WELLINGTON.
-
- _Black coat. White waistcoat. Order of the Golden Fleece. Ribbon of
- the Garter. The town in the background. Three-quarters length._
-
- BY SIR GEORGE HAYTER.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 7. COUNTESS OF KINGSTON.
-
- _Blue dress. Little dog at her feet._
-
- BY MRS. BEALE.
-
-
-SHE was the wife of William Pierrepont, fourth Earl of Kingston, and
-daughter of Robert, Lord Brooke.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 11. LORD JOHN RUSSELL.
-
- _Black dress. Holding a roll._
-
- BORN 1792, DIED 1878.
-
- BY SIR GEORGE HAYTER.
-
-
-HE was the youngest son of Lord John Russell, afterwards sixth Duke of
-Bedford, by the Honourable Georgiana Elizabeth Byng. In an able article
-in the _Times_ of 1878 mention is thus made of this eminent
-statesman:—‘He took an early interest in politics, and by the time he
-left college his political faith had crystalised into something very
-like that in which he lived, laboured, and died.’ A visit to the
-Peninsula, where the star of Wellington was then in the ascendant,
-modified his French ideas (he had commenced by being an ardent advocate
-of the Revolution in France) and inspired young Russell with such an
-admiration for the hero that ever afterwards in the fiercest political
-struggle he maintained towards the Duke the attitude and language of
-profound admiration. His subsequent career belongs to the history of his
-country. He was a zealous upholder of Catholic Emancipation, and in the
-cause of Parliamentary Reform was the leading spirit, the draft for the
-first Bill of which was drawn up by his own hand. He sat for numerous
-constituencies in the House of Commons for a period of forty-seven
-years, during many of which he was the leader of the Opposition. He
-filled many of the highest offices of State, and was First Lord of the
-Treasury from 1846 to 1852. In 1865 he was again at the head of the
-Government from which he retired in 1866, having been raised to the
-peerage as Earl Russell and Viscount Amberley in 1861, and created a
-K.G.
-
-His first wife was Adelaide, daughter of Thomas Lister of Armitage Park,
-widow of the second Lord Ribblesdale (who died in 1838 leaving two
-daughters).
-
-His second wife was Lady Frances Elliot, daughter of Gilbert, second
-Earl of Minto, by whom he had three sons and a daughter.
-
-Lord Russell was an author as well as a statesman, and published several
-works political, historical, dramatic, etc. He died at Pembroke Lodge in
-Richmond Park.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 12. THE HONOURABLE HENRY BRIDGEMAN.
-
- _Crayons. Black gown._
-
- BORN 1795, DIED 1872.
-
- BY SHARPLES.
-
-
-THE son of the first Earl of Bradford. He married in 1820 his first
-cousin Louisa, daughter of the Honourable John Bridgeman Simpson. Was a
-clergyman of the Church of England, but afterwards embraced the
-Irvingite doctrine.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 15. THE REV. LEONARD CHAPPELOW.
-
- _In pastel. An old gentleman seated on a rock with a stick and book.
- Wears his hat._
-
- BY SHARPLES.
-
-HE was chaplain to Henry, Lord Bradford.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 16. ORLANDO BRIDGEMAN, ESQ., SON OF SIR HENRY, WHO WAS AFTERWARDS
- CREATED LORD BRADFORD.
-
- _In pastel. Blue coat. Buff waistcoat._
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 17. ORLANDO BRIDGEMAN, FIRST EARL OF BRADFORD.
-
- _Seated. Black coat. White waistcoat. Right hand in his bosom._
-
- Painted in 1822.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- BEDROOM C.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 8. MARIE ANNE CHRISTINE, PRINCESS OF BAVARIA.
-
- _Low grey dress, cut square, trimmed with lace. Black head-dress
- and white feather. Necklace and earrings._
-
- BORN 1660, DIED 1690.
-
- BY DE TROYES.
-
-
-DAUGHTER of Ferdinand, Elector of Bavaria. Born at Munich. Negotiations
-being set on foot for the marriage of this Princess with the Dauphin of
-France, King Louis the Fourteenth sent De Troyes to paint a portrait of
-her, and likewise a confidential envoy to give some description of his
-future daughter-in-law. The report was satisfactory; for although not a
-real beauty, Maria Christina possessed great perfection of form, and was
-lively and agreeable. She was united to Louis, Dauphin of France, in
-1680, at Châlons-sur-Marne, where the French court repaired to do honour
-to the nuptials. Anxious to find favour in the eyes of her
-father-in-law, she perfectly succeeded in the attempt, for the King
-found her very accomplished, well-informed, of great conversational
-powers, and wonderfully ready at repartee, while her easy,
-unconstrained, though refined manners surprised the court of the Louvre.
-The only drawback to the bride’s popularity was her love of quiet and
-retirement; and after the festivities attending the celebration of the
-marriage were concluded, the Dauphine evinced her predilection for a
-small and intimate coterie, and the propensity to yield too implicitly
-to the influence of one of her Bavarian ladies, which caused some
-jealousy. Her time was fully occupied by reading and devotional
-exercises. The King strove in vain to wean her from pursuits which
-tended to seclusion from the world; but, finding his attempts useless,
-he no longer thwarted her inclinations. The Dauphine was very ill at the
-time of the birth of her third son, the Duc de Berry, and never
-recovered her health. When she felt her end approaching, she sent for
-the child, whom she embraced tenderly and blessed, concluding with these
-touching words: ‘C’est de bon cœur quoique tu me coutes bien cher.’ She
-also took a tender leave of her eldest son, the Duc de Bourgogne (father
-of Louis XV.). Louis the Fourteenth sat by the deathbed of his
-daughter-in-law, and when advised to withdraw, he said, ‘No; it is
-better I should see how my equals die;’ and he spoke some admonitory
-words in the same strain to the Dauphin, who was also present, on the
-transitory nature of earthly grandeur. The Dauphine’s funeral oration
-was preached by Fléchier, and considered a _chef-d’œuvre_.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- BEDROOM D.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- _Nos_. 1 _and_ 2.
-
-PORTRAITS OF ORLANDO G. C., VISCOUNT NEWPORT (PRESENT AND THIRD EARL OF
-BRADFORD), AND SELINA, HIS WIFE.
-
- _Crayons. Modern dress. Turquoise necklace. Diamonds in her hair._
-
- BOTH BY JAMES SWINTON, ESQ.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- BEDROOM E.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 3. THE QUEEN (WHOM GOD PRESERVE!).
-
- _In an evening dress, pale blue and red. Tiara, necklace, and earrings.
- Red ribbon. Gold jewelled chain._
-
- BY CLARKE AFTER WINTERHALTER.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- MINIATURES.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- MINIATURES.
-
-[Only those that can be identified are named here, as there are several
-on the lids of snuff-boxes and elsewhere of which we cannot trace the
-originals.]
-
-Five Miniatures in one frame which were given to the Earl of Bradford by
-Mr. Shirley in 1868.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- _1_. MISS WORSLEY, HEIRESS OF APPULDERCOMBE.
-
- _In powder._
-
-She was the first wife of the Honourable John Bridgeman Simpson.
-
-
- -------
-
- 2. THE HONOURABLE LUCY BYNG.
-
- _Reading._
-
-She was wife of the first Earl of Bradford.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- 3. THE HONOURABLE LUCY BYNG.
-
- _With a lace veil on her head._
-
-
- -------
-
-
- 4. JOSEPHINE, EMPRESS OF THE FRENCH.
-
- _In a medallion._
-
-
- -------
-
-
- 5. ELIZABETH, LADY BRADFORD.
-
- _White dress. Pearl necklace. Powder. On a snuff-box._
-
-She was the wife of Henry Bridgeman, first Lord Bradford.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- 6. THE HON. ELIZABETH BRIDGEMAN,
-
- AFTERWARDS MRS. GUNNING.
-
-Left by Sir George Gunning to the Countess of Bradford.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- 7. MRS. SALKEN.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- 8. ALEXANDER II., CZAR OF RUSSIA.
-
- BORN 1818, MURDERED 1881.
-
- _On the lid of a snuff-box._
-
-Presented by the Emperor to the third Earl of Bradford, when Master of
-the Horse in May 1874.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- 9. LADY JOHN RUSSELL, SECOND DAUGHTER OF VISCOUNT TORRINGTON.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- 10. THE SAME.
-
- _Her hair powdered._
-
-
- -------
-
-
- 11. HON. LUCY BYNG, COUNTESS OF BRADFORD.
-
-On a brooch which belonged to her sister, Mrs. Seymour, and was given to
-the Earl of Bradford by Lady Charles Russell, _née_ Seymour.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- 12. HON. O. G. C. BRIDGEMAN WHEN TWO YEARS OLD.
-
- PRESENT AND THIRD EARL OF BRADFORD.
-
- BY VISCOUNTESS NEWPORT AFTER ANTHONY STEWART.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- 13. HON. GEORGE BYNG.
-
- _Small oval._
-
- DIED AN INFANT.
-
-The son of the fourth Viscount Torrington by Lady Lucy Boyle.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- 14. THE HON. ORLANDO AND MRS. BRIDGEMAN,
-
- AFTERWARDS FIRST EARL AND COUNTESS OF
- BRADFORD.
-
- _On a snuff-box._
-
-
-
-
- 15.
-
- JOHN BOYLE, FIFTH EARL OF CORK AND ORRERY.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- 16. MR. CHAPPELOW, AFTERWARDS CHAPLAIN TO THE EARL OF BRADFORD.
-
- AGED 18.
-
- _Trencher-cap and college gown._
-
-
- -------
-
-
- 17. WILLIAM THE FIRST, EMPEROR OF GERMANY.
-
- _On a snuff-box._
-
-Presented by the Crown Prince to the third Earl of Bradford, when Master
-of the Horse in 1879.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- 18. THE HON. ORLANDO BRIDGEMAN,
-
- AFTERWARDS FIRST EARL OF BRADFORD.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- 19. A LADY MARKED AS ‘MOTHER OF MARY SCOTT.’
-
- Presented to the Earl of Bradford in 1844 by Mrs. Scott.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- 20. LADY LUCY BRIDGEMAN,
-
- DAUGHTER OF EDMUND BOYLE, EARL OF CORK AND ORRERY.
-
- _Black silhouette._
-
-
- -------
-
-
- _21_. HON. AND REV. GEORGE BRIDGEMAN,
-
- SON OF THE FIRST LORD BRADFORD, AND HUSBAND OF
- THE PRECEDING.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- 22. GEORGE BYNG, FOURTH VISCOUNT TORRINGTON.
-
- _A circular miniature._
-
-
- -------
-
-
- 23. LADY LUCY WHITMORE, DAUGHTER OF ORLANDO
-
- FIRST EARL OF BRADFORD, BY THE HON. LUCY BYNG.
- Married W. Whitmore, Esq. of Dudmaston, Co. Salop.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- 24. GENERAL VANDERNERCK.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- 25. HON. MRS. BRIDGEMAN AND LADY JOHN RUSSELL.
-
- _In one case._
-
-The Honourable Lucy and the Honourable Georgiana Byng—daughters of Lord
-Torrington—the former afterwards Countess of Bradford, to whom the
-miniatures were bequeathed by the Duke of Bedford.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- 26. GEORGINA ELIZABETH,
-
- WIFE OF THE SECOND
- EARL OF BRADFORD (_née_ MONCREIFFE).
-
- PAINTED BY SIR W. ROSS.
-
-
- -------
-
-
-27. THE TWO ELDEST CHILDREN OF THE SECOND EARL AND COUNTESS OF BRADFORD.
-
- BY MISS MAGDALEN ROSS, 1828.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- 28. GEORGE IV., KING OF ENGLAND.
-
- BY BONE, AFTER SIR THOS. LAWRENCE.
-
-Belonged to the Marquis Conyngham, after whose death it was given to the
-present Earl of Bradford by Lady Elizabeth Bryan.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- _29_. THE HON. MRS. PELHAM,
-
-DAUGHTER OF THE HON. BRIDGEMAN SIMPSON, AND WIFE OF CHARLES, AFTERWARDS
- FIRST EARL OF YARBOROUGH.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- 30. VISCOUNT NEWPORT, AFTERWARDS SECOND EARL OF BRADFORD.
-
- 1818. BY ENGLEHART.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- 31. GEORGINA ELIZABETH, VISCOUNTESS NEWPORT, WIFE OF THE ABOVE.
-
- BY CHARLOTTE JONES.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- _32_. SELINA LOUISA, VISCOUNTESS NEWPORT,
-
- WIFE OF THE PRESENT AND THIRD EARL OF BRADFORD.
-
- _Full-length miniature._
-
- BY THORBURN.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- 33. HON. ISABELLA BYNG, AFTERWARDS MARCHIONESS OF BATH.
-
- _In a white satin case._
-
-Given to the Countess of Bradford, on her marriage, by the Marquis of
-Bath.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- 34. NAPOLEON BUONAPARTE.
-
- _A medallion._
-
-
- -------
-
-
- 35. HON. LUCY BYNG, WIFE OF THE FIRST EARL OF BRADFORD.
-
- _Small miniature mounted on a red snuff-box._
-
-
- -------
-
-
- 36. THE DUKE OF WELLINGTON.
-
- _A medallion._
-
-
- -------
-
-
- 37. GEORGINA ELIZABETH, WIFE OF THE SECOND EARL OF BRADFORD.
-
- AFTER SIR WILLIAM ROSS.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- 38. GENERAL THE HON. JAMES RAMSAY.
-
- BY MISS G. E. MONCREIFFE.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- 39. MRS. HENRY TIGHE.
-
- BY MRS. KENYON.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- 40. HON. LUCY BYNG,
-
- AFTERWARDS WIFE OF THE FIRST EARL OF BRADFORD.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- 41. SIR ORLANDO BRIDGEMAN, LORD-KEEPER.
-
- _From a portrait at Chirk Castle._
-
- BY MISS CAROLINE BRIDGEMAN SIMPSON.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- LORD BRADFORD’S BEDROOM.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- LORD BRADFORD’S BEDROOM.
-
- -------
-
-
-TWO SKETCHES OF LORD ALBERT CONYNGHAM, AFTERWARDS FIRST LORD
- LONDESBOROUGH, WITH HIS SECOND WIFE.
-
- HE WAS BORN 1805, DIED 1860.
- SHE DIED 1883.
-
- TWO SKETCHES IN OILS BY FRANCIS GRANT, AFTERWARDS SIR FRANCIS, _P._R.A.
-
- _Design for a large Picture._
-
-
-HE was the second surviving son of Henry, first Marquis Conyngham, by
-Elizabeth, daughter of Joseph Denison, Esq. of Denbies, County Surrey.
-Having succeeded to the large estates and fortunes of his maternal
-uncle, Lord Albert Conyngham assumed the surname and arms of Denison,
-and was elevated to the peerage by the title of Baron Londesborough. He
-married, first, in 1833, the Honourable Henrietta Maria Forester, fourth
-daughter of the first Baron Forester, who died in 1841. Lord
-Londesborough married, secondly, Ursula, daughter of Admiral the
-Honourable Charles Bridgeman, who became the wife of Lord Otho
-Fitzgerald.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- THE THREE SONS OF GEORGE, VISCOUNT NEWPORT, PRESENT AND THIRD EARL OF
- BRADFORD.
-
- _With rocking-horse._
-
- BY CALDERON, IN HIS VERY EARLY DAYS.
-
-GEORGE C. O. BRIDGEMAN, present Viscount Newport. Born 1845; married,
-1869, Lady Ida Lumley, daughter of the ninth Earl of Scarborough. Was in
-the Life Guards from 1864 till 1867. Was elected M.P. for the Northern
-Division of Shropshire from 1867 to 1885.
-
-HONOURABLE FRANCIS BRIDGEMAN; born 1846; married, in 1883, Gertrude,
-daughter of George Hanbury, Esq. of Blythewood. Is in the Scots Guards,
-and M.P. for Bolton.
-
-HONOURABLE GERALD BRIDGEMAN; born 1847; Lieutenant in Rifle Brigade.
-Died 1870.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- LADIES SARAH AND CLEMENTINA VILLIERS.
-
- BY CHALON.
-
-
-THE daughters of the fifth Earl of Jersey, by Lady Sarah Fane, daughter
-of the tenth Earl of Westmoreland. Lady Sarah married, in 1842, Prince
-Nicholas Esterhazy, and died in 1853. Lady Clementina died in 1858.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- CHARLOTTE, LADY SUFFIELD.
-
- _In crayons._
-
- DIED 1859.
-
- BY SLATER.
-
-
-SHE was the only daughter of Alan Hyde, second Lord Gardner. Married, in
-1835, Edward Vernon, fourth Baron Suffield, by whom she had no children.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- LADY MABEL BRIDGEMAN.
-
- BY E. CLIFFORD.
-
-
-THE eldest daughter of the third and present Earl of Bradford. Married
-in 1887 to Colonel Kenyon-Slaney, Grenadier Guards, M.P. for Newport
-Division of Shropshire.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- HON. G. C. O. BRIDGEMAN, THE PRESENT
- VISCOUNT NEWPORT (1888).
-
- BORN 1845.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- LADY BRADFORD’S ANTEROOM AND SITTING-ROOM.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- LADY BRADFORD’S ANTEROOM.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- LADY ALBERT CONYNGHAM.
-
- DIED IN 1841.
-
- BY FRANCIS GRANT.
-
-
-THE Hon. Henrietta Forester, married to Lord Albert Conyngham,
-afterwards Lord Londesborough, as his first wife.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- QUEEN VICTORIA INVESTING THE SULTAN WITH THE ORDER OF THE GARTER ON
- BOARD THE ROYAL YACHT.
-
- BY G. THOMAS.
-
-
-THIS picture was painted by permission of the Queen for Lord Bradford,
-who as Lord Chamberlain assisted at the ceremony. Mr. Thomas painted the
-same subject in a large picture for the Queen, and he died before he had
-finished this replica.
-
-The Queen wished to confer the Order of the Garter upon the Sultan
-without any previous notice, and the Lord Chamberlain was commissioned
-to borrow the Insignia from two of the Princes, K.G.s, who were on
-board. This he did by procuring the Blue Ribbon and George from Prince
-Arthur, and the Star from Prince Louis of Hesse. After the investiture
-the Sultan was told, through his interpreter, that the Queen had ordered
-more costly Insignia on purpose for His Imperial Majesty, and that as
-soon as these were ready they should be exchanged for those employed
-to-day. Upon which, without a moment’s hesitation, the Sultan said to
-the Lord Chamberlain, through his interpreter, ‘No, no, those which the
-Queen has herself placed on me, I will never part from.’
-
-We are tempted to insert this anecdote as it has an historical interest,
-and one cannot but feel that the Sultan’s speech betokened the chivalry
-of a newly dubbed knight.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- JOHN GEORGE, LORD FORESTER.
-
- _Black Coat._
-
- BY ROTHWELL.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- LADY BRADFORD’S SITTING-ROOM.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- MARY ISABELLA, DUCHESS OF RUTLAND.
-
- _Small sketch in colours._
-
- DIED 1831.
-
- BY COSWAY.
-
-
-SHE was the daughter of the fourth Duke of Beaufort, and married, in
-1775, Charles, fourth Duke of Rutland. She was remarkable for her
-extreme beauty.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- QUEEN VICTORIA IN ST. GEORGE’S CHAPEL AT THE MARRIAGE OF THE PRINCE OF
- WALES.
-
- BY THOMAS.
-
-
- -------
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- THE HON. MABEL AND HON. FLORENCE BRIDGEMAN.
-
- BY A. BLAKELY.
-
-DAUGHTERS of Viscount Newport, present and third Earl of Bradford.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- HON. GERALD O. M. BRIDGEMAN.
-
- BORN 1847, DIED 1870.
-
- BY LUNDGREN.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- COUNTESS OF CHESTERFIELD.
-
- DIED 1885.
-
- BY MISS CRUICKSHANK, AFTER SIR EDWIN LANDSEER.
-
-
-SHE was the eldest daughter of the first Lord Forester, consequently
-sister to the present Countess of Bradford. She married, in 1830, George
-Stanhope, sixth Earl of Chesterfield.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- VESTIBULE.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- VESTIBULE.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- _No_. 1. COUNTESS OF BRADFORD.
-
- _White satin gown and lace. Yellow rose. Lace tie with jewel.
- Lace head-dress._
-
- BY CLIFFORD.
-
-
-SELENA LOUISA FORESTER, wife of Orlando G. C. Bridgeman, third Earl of
-Bradford.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- _No._ 2. PORTRAIT. UNKNOWN.
-
- BY SIR PETER LELY.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- _No._ 3. DIANA BRIDGEMAN.
-
- _Blue low dress. Lace stomacher and sleeves. String of pearls. Black
- cap. White feather._
-
- DIED 1764.
-
- BY F. COTES.
-
-
-SHE was the second daughter of Sir Orlando Bridgeman by Lady Anne
-Newport. She married John Sawbridge, Esq. of Ollantigh, County Kent.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 4. LADY MYDDLETON.
-
- _Blue dress. White bodice. Large sleeves._
-
- BY SIR GODFREY KNELLER.
-
-
-SHE was the only daughter of Sir Orlando Bridgeman, Lord Chief-Justice,
-and married Sir Thomas Myddleton, second Bart. of Chirk, as his second
-wife. Her only daughter Charlotte, married, first, Edward, Earl of
-Warwick, and secondly, the Right Hon. Joseph Addison, the celebrated
-author.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 5. PORTRAIT. UNKNOWN.
-
- BY SIR PETER LELY.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 6. LADY MARY NEWPORT.
-
- _Blue dress. Short hair. King Charles’s spaniel._
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 7. ELIZABETH, WIFE OF HENRY BRIDGEMAN, FIRST BARON BRADFORD.
-
- BY PINE.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 10. MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS.
-
- AFTER ZUCCHERO.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 11. MISTRESS MARY, OR MOLL DAVIES.
-
- _Golden brown satin gown._
-
- BY SIR PETER LELY.
-
-
-IN the reign of Charles the Second, she was a member of the Duke of
-York’s troop of comedians, and one of the four female actresses who
-boarded at Sir William Davenant’s house. She was on the stage as early
-as 1664, in which year she appeared in ‘The Stepmother,’ and afterwards
-as Celia in ‘The Rivals,’ an adaptation by Davenant of the ‘Two Noble
-Kinsmen.’ Pepys makes frequent mention of her, and was a great admirer
-of her talent. He even pits her against Nell Gwynne: ‘Little Mistress
-Davies danced a jig at the end of the play in boy’s clothes, far
-superior to Nelly’s performance in the same character.’ It is true he
-calls her an impertinent slut, but that did not prevent the King from
-losing his heart, and my lady Castlemaine from being very jealous,
-seeing Charles’s eyes were fixed all the time of the play on Mistress
-Moll. But what especially fascinated his Merry Majesty were the wild,
-mad, melodious songs she sang, and her wonderful grace and arch
-demeanour in dancing. Charles bought and furnished a house for her, and
-made her a present of a ring which cost £600, a large sum in those days.
-He had a daughter by her, called Mary Tudor, who was born in 1673, and
-married a son of Sir Francis Ratcliffe, afterwards Earl of Derwentwater.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 13. PORTRAIT. UNKNOWN.
-
- BY SIR ANTONIO MORE.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- PASSAGE—FIRST FLOOR.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- PASSAGE—FIRST FLOOR.
-
- SOUTH WALL.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 2. MALE PORTRAIT. UNKNOWN.
-
-_Round black velvet hat. Long hair. Black velvet coat. Brown vest cut
- square. Chain and medallion. His right hand on baluster, holding a
- paper roll._
-
- BY PHILIP DE KONING.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 4. ORLANDO BRIDGEMAN, ESQ., AFTERWARDS SECOND BARON AND FIRST EARL
- OF BRADFORD, 1815.
-
- BORN 1762, DIED 1825.
-
-_As a youth. Light-coloured dress. White under sleeves. Lace collar with
- tassels. Long hair. Cloak, same colour as dress, over right
- shoulder._
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 5. GEORGE BYNG, FOURTH VISCOUNT TORRINGTON.
-
- _As a boy. Buff coat. White collar._
-
- DIED 1812.
-
- BY RAMSAY.
-
-
-THE eldest son of the third Viscount by Miss Daniel. He married in 1765
-the Lady Lucy Boyle, the only daughter of John, Earl of Cork and Orrery,
-by whom he had four daughters, the eldest being the Countess of
-Bradford.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 6. SECOND SIR ORLANDO BRIDGEMAN, FOURTH BARONET.
-
- _Claret coat. Powder._
-
- BY F. COTES.
-
-
-
-
- NELL GWYNNE.
-
- _Oval. Purple and white dress. Green and red bow on left shoulder.
- Pearl necklet._
-
- DIED 1687.
-
- BY MRS. BEALE.
-
-
-SHE first attracted notice by her beauty and arch demeanour when selling
-oranges in the taverns and theatres. She studied acting under the
-elocutionists Hart and Lacy, both very much esteemed in the dramatic
-profession at the time. Her talents soon made her distinguished on the
-stage, but she seldom attempted tragedy. Her sprightliness and grace
-soon attracted the attention of the King, and before this period she was
-said to have counted the Duke of Buckingham and Lord Dorset among her
-admirers. The enemies of the Duchess of Cleveland were glad of an
-opportunity of recommending pretty Mistress Nell as a rival to the
-haughty beauty, to whom she stood in strange contrast, both in
-appearance and good-humour. In 1663 she was still a member of the King’s
-company at Drury Lane, and was supposed to have quitted the stage about
-1672. Pepys, in speaking of her in 1665, calls her ‘pretty witty Nell,’
-and in 1666 he mentions that he went with his wife to see ‘The Maiden
-Queen’ by Dryden, in which there is a comical part taken by Nell that ‘I
-never can hope to see the like done again by man or woman.’ Also in the
-character of a mad girl and a young gallant, both admirable. But when
-she attempted such a part as the Emperor’s daughter, good Samuel
-confesses she does it ‘most basely.’ Burnet designates her as the
-‘indiscreetest and wildest creature that ever was in a court.’ Charles
-gave her a house in Pall Mall, in which we are told there was one room
-on the ground-floor of which the walls and ceiling were entirely
-composed of looking-glass. An anecdote is given of her, that, on one
-occasion when driving in a superb coach up Ludgate Hill, she met some
-bailiffs hurrying a clergyman to prison for debt. Inquiring as to the
-sum, she paid it on the spot, and later on procured preferment for him.
-Her son, afterwards Duke of St. Albans, was born in 1670 before she left
-the stage.
-
-Dryden was a great admirer of pretty Nell, and wrote a prologue for her,
-which she spoke under a hat of such enormous dimensions as almost to
-conceal her small figure. The audience were convulsed with laughter, and
-Charles was almost suffocated.
-
-Nell called his Majesty _her_ Charles the Third, as she had had two
-protectors before who were his namesakes. Although thoughtless and
-reckless, she was a good friend to Charles in some respects, urging him
-constantly to pay more attention to public affairs, and interceding with
-him for objects of charity; she took a great interest in the foundation
-of Chelsea Hospital, and persuaded the King to hasten its completion.
-‘How am I to please my people?’ he asked of her one day. ‘There is but
-one way,’ she replied: ‘dismiss your ladies and attend to your
-business:’ neither of which injunctions was obeyed. Nell Gwynne died at
-her house in Pall Mall in 1691, having survived the King some years,
-who, it will be remembered, in his last moments recommended her to the
-care of those who stood beside his bed. Dr. Tenison, afterwards
-Archbishop of Canterbury, preached her funeral sermon at the church of
-St. Martin’s in the Fields, where she lies buried. There is little doubt
-she died a penitent.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 9. PORTRAIT OF A LADY. UNKNOWN.
-
- BY G. MORPHY.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- WEST WALL.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 14. PORTRAIT OF A LADY.
-
- _Low brown dress. White sleeves. Pearls in her hair. Little
- dog in her lap._
-
- BY GREENHILL.
-
-
-THIS lady is supposed to be Ursula, wife of Sir John Bridgeman.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 18. FRANCIS NEWPORT, AFTERWARDS EARL OF BRADFORD.
-
- _Brown dress. Long hair. Lace cravat._
-
- BY SIR GODFREY KNELLER.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 19. GEORGE FORESTER, ESQUIRE.
-
- _Hunting dress. Fox’s brush upon table._
-
- BORN 1762, DIED 1811.
-
-
-HE was the son of Brook Forester, Esquire, by Elizabeth, daughter and
-heir of George Weld, Esquire of Willey Park, County Salop. George
-Forester never married, but left his fortune and estates to his cousin,
-Cecil Weld Forester, who was raised to the peerage as Baron Forester.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 20. PORTRAIT OF A GENTLEMAN. UNKNOWN.
-
- _Red dress. Lace cravat. Short white wig._
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 21. JOHN BRIDGEMAN, BISHOP OF CHESTER.
-
- _Surplice and college cap. Arms of the See of Chester impaling
- Bridgeman in a shield above._
-
- BORN 1577, DIED 1652.
-
- BY VAN SOMERS.
-
-
- -------
-
-
- No. 22. COLONEL KINNEAR.
-
- _Blue coat. Powder._
-
- DIED 1780.
-
- BY F. COTES.
-
- HE was Colonel of the 50th Regiment of Foot.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- INDEX OF PORTRAITS.
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- INDEX OF PORTRAITS.
-
-
- ──────
-
-
- _The Page marked in black figures gives the Biographical Notice._
-
- ARUNDEL AND SURREY, EARL OF, =124=
-
- BATH, HON. ISABELLA BYNG, MARCHIONESS OF, 227
-
- BAVARIA, PRINCESS OF (MARIA CHRISTINA), =214=
-
- BEDFORD, FRANCIS RUSSELL, FOURTH EARL OF, =44=
-
- ... WILLIAM, FIRST DUKE OF, =66=
-
- BOLEYN, QUEEN ANN, 108
-
- BRADFORD, LADY ELIZABETH, =207=, 222, 244
-
- ... FRANCIS NEWPORT, FIRST EARL OF, =183=, 197, 253
-
- BRADFORD, GEORGE AUGUSTUS F. H. BRIDGEMAN, SECOND EARL OF, =202=, 226
-
- ... GEORGINA MONCREIFFE, WIFE OF SECOND EARL OF, 225, 226, 227
-
- ... THE TWO ELDEST CHILDREN OF THE SECOND EARL, 226
-
- ... HENRY NEWPORT, THIRD EARL OF, =178=
-
- ... HENRY BRIDGEMAN, FIRST LORD, =208=
-
- ... ... ... AND FAMILY, 117, 188
-
- ... LUCY BYNG, DOWAGER COUNTESS OF, =208=, 221, 222, 223, 225, 227, 228
-
- ... MARY, COUNTESS OF, 168
-
- ... ORLANDO BRIDGEMAN, FIRST EARL OF, =109=, 213, 224, 249
-
- ... ORLANDO GEORGE CHARLES BRIDGEMAN, THIRD EARL OF, =119=, 204, 216,
- 223, 226
-
- ... THE THREE SONS OF THE THIRD EARL, =232=
-
- ... RICHARD NEWPORT, SECOND EARL OF, =169=
-
- ... SELINA LOUISA, COUNTESS OF, =103=, 216, 227, 243
-
- BRIDGEMAN, LADY ANNE, =180=
-
- ... CHARLES, THE HONOURABLE CAPTAIN, R.N., =102=
-
- ... CHARLOTTE, =190=
-
- BRIDGEMAN, DIANA, =243=
-
- ... ELIZABETH, WIFE OF BISHOP JOHN, =189=
-
- ... ELIZABETH, HONOURABLE, =189=, 222
-
- ... FRANCIS, HONOURABLE, 232
-
- ... GEORGE, ESQUIRE, =117=
-
- ... GEORGE, HONOURABLE AND REVEREND, =111=, 225
-
- ... GERALD, THE HONOURABLE, =232=, 240
-
- ... HENRY, THE HONOURABLE, =212=
-
- ... JOHN, BISHOP OF CHESTER, =175=, 254
-
- ... SIR JOHN, SECOND BARONET, =182=
-
- ... ... THIRD BARONET, =187=
-
- ... LUCY, LADY, =224=
-
- ... MABEL, LADY, =233=
-
- ... LADIES MABEL AND FLORENCE, =240=
-
- ... SIR ORLANDO, LORD KEEPER, 18, =170=, 228
-
- ... ORLANDO, ESQUIRE, =190=
-
- ... ... AFTERWARDS FIRST EARL OF BRADFORD, =109=, 213, 224, 249
-
- ... ... THE HON. AND WIFE, AFTERWARDS FIRST EARL AND COUNTESS, 223
-
- ... ... FOURTH BARONET, =177=, 250
-
- ... ... THE HONOURABLE, GRENADIER GUARDS, =101=
-
- BRIDGEMAN, ORLANDO G. C., THE HON., AS A CHILD, AFTERWARDS THIRD EARL
- OF BRADFORD, =119=
-
- ... THE THREE SONS OF THE THIRD EARL OF BRADFORD, =232=
-
- ... URSULA, WIFE OF SIR JOHN, THIRD BARONET, (_Qu._), 252
-
- BUONAPARTE, NAPOLEON, EMPEROR OF FRANCE, 107, 227
-
- BYNG, HONOURABLE LUCY, =208=, 221, 222, 223, 225, 227, 228
-
- ... ... GEORGE, 223
-
- ... HONOURABLE GEORGIANA, 225
-
- CAREW, SIR NICHOLAS, =138=
-
- CARLISLE, COUNTESS OF, AND NIECE, =123=
-
- CHARLES THE FIRST, KING, =130=
-
- CHAPPELOW, REVEREND LEONARD, =213=
-
- ... ... WHEN A YOUTH, 224
-
- CHESTER, JOHN BRIDGEMAN, BISHOP OF CHESTER, =175=, 254
-
- ... ELIZABETH, WIFE OF, =189=
-
- CHESTERFIELD, COUNTESS OF, =240=
-
- CONYNGHAM, LORD ALBERT, 231
-
- ... LADY ALBERT, FIRST WIFE, =237=
-
- ... ... SECOND WIFE, 231
-
- CORK AND ORRERY, JOHN BOYLE, FIFTH, EARL OF, =224=
-
- DALHOUSIE, MARQUESS OF, =203=
-
- DAVIES, MISTRESS MARY, =245=
-
- DERBY, EDWARD STANLEY, FOURTEENTH EARL OF, =110=
-
- DIGBY, SIR KENELM, =141=
-
- DORMER, LADY ISABELLA, =95=
-
- DYSART, LIONEL TOLLEMACHE, SECOND EARL OF, =191=
-
- ... COUNTESS OF, =167=
-
- ESSEX, THOMAS CROMWELL, EARL OF, =155=
-
- FEILDING, LADY DIANA, =96=
-
- FORESTER, GEORGE, ESQUIRE, =253=
-
- ... LORD, 238
-
- GEORGE THE SECOND, KING OF ENGLAND, =109=
-
- ... THE FOURTH, 226
-
- GERMANY, WILLIAM THE FIRST, EMPEROR OF, 224
-
- GORING, COLONEL, AFTERWARDS LORD, =80=
-
- GROTIUS, HUGO, =19=
-
- GUNNING, HON. MRS., =189=, 222
-
- ... SIR GEORGE, =114=
-
- GWYNNE, NELL, =250=
-
- HAMET BEN HAMET, 208
-
- HARVEY, DR., =57=
-
- HERBERT, HENRY, FOURTH LORD OF RIPSFORD, =181=
-
- ... MISTRESS, =153=
-
- HOLLAND, HENRY RICH, FIRST EARL OF, =195=
-
-
- JOSEPHINE, EMPRESS OF FRANCE, 222
-
-
- KILLIGREW, SIR THOMAS, =148=
-
- ... LADY, =163=
-
- KINGSTON, COUNTESS OF, =211=
-
- KINNEAR, COLONEL, =254=
-
-
- LEWIS, HENRY GRESWOLD, =111=
-
- LIVERPOOL, ROBERT JENKINSON, SECOND EARL OF, =104=
-
- LOWTHER, SIR WILLIAM, =114=
-
- LYNEDOCH, LORD, =201=
-
-
- MAURICE, PRINCE, =75=
-
- MONCREIFFE, SIR THOMAS, AND SISTER, =209=
-
- ... GEORGINA, WIFE OF THE SECOND EARL OF BRADFORD, 225, 226, 227
-
- MORTIMER, CAPTAIN, 210
-
- MYDDLETON, SIR THOMAS, =71=
-
- ... LADY, =244=
-
-
- NEWPORT, ANDREW, THE HONOURABLE, =36=
-
- ... LADY MARY, =244=
-
- NEWPORT, RICHARD, SECOND EARL OF BRADFORD, =169=
-
- ... VISCOUNT, GEORGE A. BRIDGEMAN, AFTERWARDS SECOND EARL OF BRADFORD,
- =202=, 226
-
- ... VISCOUNTESS, HIS WIFE GEORGINA, 225, 226, 227
-
- ... VISCOUNT, ORLANDO GEORGE CHARLES BRIDGEMAN, AFTERWARDS THIRD EARL
- OF BRADFORD, =119=, 204, 216, 223, 226
-
- ... THE THIRD EARL AND HIS WIFE, 216
-
- ... THE THREE SONS OF THE THIRD EARL, =232=
-
- ... VISCOUNT, SON OF THIRD EARL OF BRADFORD, =232=, 233
-
-
- OXFORD, COUNTESS OF, =141=
-
-
- PAYNE, CAPTAIN JOHN WILLETT, =118=
-
- PELHAM, THE HONOURABLE MRS., 226
-
- PORTRAITS UNKNOWN, ETC., 97, 104, 130, 133, 134, 138, 140, 141, 192,
- 201, 221, 243, 244, 245, 249, 252, 253.
-
-
- QUEEN VICTORIA, 109, 210, 217
-
- ... INVESTITURE OF THE SULTAN, 237
-
- ... MARRIAGE OF THE PRINCE OF WALES, 239
-
-
- RAMSAY, GENERAL THE HON. JAMES, 228
-
- RICHARD THE THIRD, KING (_Qu._), 104
-
- RUPERT, PRINCE, =83=
-
- RUSSELL, LADY DIANA, =91=, 123
-
- ... DIANA, LADY RUSSELL, YOUNGEST DAUGHTER OF THE THIRD EARL OF
- BEDFORD, =97=
-
- ... EDWARD, THE HONOURABLE, =65=
-
- ... FRANCIS, THE HONOURABLE, =72=
-
- ... JOHN, THE HONOURABLE, COLONEL, =43=
-
- ... LORD JOHN, =211=
-
- ... LADY JOHN, 223, =225=
-
- ... LADY RACHEL, =3=
-
- ... LORD ROBERT, =18=
-
- ... LADY ROBERT, =17=
-
- ... LORD WILLIAM, =48=
-
- RUSSIA, ALEXANDER II., CZAR OF, 222
-
- RUTLAND, MARY ISABELLA, DUCHESS OF, =239=
-
-
- SALTREN, MRS., 222
-
- SCOTS, MARY QUEEN OF, 207, 244
-
- SCOTT, MRS., 224
-
- SEYMOUR, LORD HUGH, VICE-ADMIRAL, =115=
-
- SIMPSON, HONOURABLE JOHN BRIDGEMAN, =113=
-
- ... HONOURABLE MRS., =209=, 221
-
- SOMERSET, EDWARD SEYMOUR, DUKE OF (PROTECTOR), =131=
-
- SOUTHAMPTON, THOMAS WRIOTHESLEY, EARL OF, =78=
-
- STRAFFORD, EARL OF, AND HIS SECRETARY, =37=
-
- SUFFIELD, CHARLOTTE, LADY, =233=
-
- SUNDERLAND, DOROTHY, COUNTESS OF, =125=
-
-
- TIGHE, MRS. HENRY, 228
-
- TORRINGTON, GEORGE BYNG, FOURTH VISCOUNT, 225, =249=
-
- ... VISCOUNTESS, =191=
-
- TURENNE, MARSHAL, =197=
-
- TURKEY, SULTAN OF, INVESTITURE OF, 237
-
-
- UNKNOWN PORTRAITS, ETC., 97, 104, 130, 133, 134, 138, 140, 141, 192,
- 201, 221, 224, 243 244, 245, 249, 252, 253.
-
-
- VANDERNERCK, 225
-
- VANDYCK, ANTHONY, =134=
-
- VILLIERS, LADIES SARAH AND CLEMENTINA, 232
-
-
- WALES, PRINCE OF, MARRIAGE OF, 239
-
- WELLINGTON, DUKE OF, =204=, 210, 227
-
- WEST, COLONEL, =78=
-
- WHITMORE, LADY LUCY, =225=
-
- WILBRAHAM, SIR THOMAS, =186=
-
- ... LADY, =186=
-
- WORSLEY, MISS, =209=, 221
-
-
- YATES, MARY, 207
-
-
-
-
- --------------
-
-
-
-
- ERRATA.
-
-
-Page 43, line 6, _for_ youngest _read_ third.
-
- " 57, line 14, after Riley put (?).
-
- " 71, last line, _for_ Woodney _read_ Woodhey.
-
- " 103, line 3, _for_ Elizabeth Anne, _read_ Eliza Caroline.
-
- " 117, line 4, _dele_ (?).
-
- " 170, line 5, _for_ Riley _read_ Sir Peter Lely.
-
- " 175, line 6, _for_ Born 1575, Died 1657-8. _read_ Born 1577, Died
- 1652.
-
- " 208, line 4, _for_ only _read_ eldest surviving.
-
- " 210, line 6, _dele_ the words ‘for the Earl of Bradford.’
-
- " 222, line 7 from foot, _for_ Salken _read_ Saltren.
-
- " 223, line 11, _for_ ‘_née_ Seymour’ _read_ ‘_née_ Davies, niece of
- Mr. Seymour,’
-
- " 226, line 2, _for_ two _read_ five.
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- ● Transcriber’s Notes:
- ○ Inconsistent formatting of portrait descriptions was regularized.
- ○ Missing or obscured punctuation was silently corrected.
- ○ Typographical errors were silently corrected.
- ○ Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation were made consistent only
- when a predominant form was found in this book.
- ○ Text that was in italics is enclosed by underscores (_italics_);
- text that was bold by “equal” signs (=bold=).
-
-
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BIOGRAPHICAL CATALOGUE OF THE
-PORTRAITS AT WESTON, THE SEAT OF THE EARL OF BRADFORD ***
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