Letters of Horace Walpole — Volume II eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 327 pages of information about Letters of Horace Walpole — Volume II.

Letters of Horace Walpole — Volume II eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 327 pages of information about Letters of Horace Walpole — Volume II.
admitted.  Why the Margravine of Anspach, with the same pretensions, was not, I do not understand; perhaps she did not attempt it.  But I forget to retract, and make amende honorable to Mrs. Harte.  I had only heard of her attitudes; and those, in dumb show, I have not yet seen.  Oh! but she sings admirably; has a very fine, strong voice; is an excellent buffa, and an astonishing tragedian.  She sung Nina in the highest perfection; and there her attitudes were a whole theatre of grace and various expressions.

[Footnote 1:  Mrs. Harte, the celebrated Lady Hamilton, with whom Nelson was so intimately acquainted, though old Lord St. Vincent always maintained that it had never been more than a purely Platonic attachment.  Her previous life, however, had been notoriously such as rendered her inadmissible at our Court, though that of Naples was less particular.]

[Footnote 2:  Mrs. Hastings, the wife of the great Governor-General, had previously been married to Baron Imhoff, a German miniature painter; but she had obtained a divorce from him, and, as the Baron returned to Germany with an amount of riches that he could hardly have earned by skill in his profession, the scandalous tongues of some of Hastings’s enemies imputed to him that he had, in fact, bought her of her husband.]

The next evening I was again at Queensberry House, where the Comtesse Emilie de Boufflers played on her harp, and the Princesse di Castelcigala, the Neapolitan minister’s wife, danced one of her country dances, with castanets, very prettily, with her husband.  Madame du Barry was there too, and I had a good deal of frank conversation with her about Monsieur de Choiseul; having been at Paris at the end of his reign and the beginning of hers, and of which I knew so much by my intimacy with the Duchesse de Choiseul.

On Monday was the boat-race [at Richmond].  I was in the great room at the Castle, with the Duke of Clarence, Lady Di., Lord Robert Spencer, and the House of Bouverie, to see the boats start from the bridge to Thistleworth, and back to a tent erected on Lord Dysart’s meadow, just before Lady Di.’s windows; whither we went to see them arrive, and where we had breakfast.  For the second heat, I sat in my coach on the bridge; and did not stay for the third.  The day had been coined on purpose, with my favourite south-east wind.  The scene, both up the river and down, was what only Richmond upon earth can exhibit.  The crowds on those green velvet meadows and on the shores, the yachts, barges, pleasure and small boats, and the windows and gardens lined with spectators, were so delightful, that when I came home from that vivid show, I thought Strawberry looked as dull and solitary as a hermitage.  At night there was a ball at the Castle, and illuminations, with the Duke’s cypher, &c. in coloured lamps, as were the houses of his Royal Highness’s tradesmen.  I went again in the evening to the French ladies on the Green, where there was a bonfire; but, you may believe, not to the ball.

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Letters of Horace Walpole — Volume II from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.