Prime Ministers and Some Others eBook

George William Erskine Russell
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 287 pages of information about Prime Ministers and Some Others.

Prime Ministers and Some Others eBook

George William Erskine Russell
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 287 pages of information about Prime Ministers and Some Others.

[Footnote *:  He was christened from a gold bowl by the Archbishop of Dublin, Lord Normanton.]

The Duke of Bedford was one of the first Englishmen who took a shooting in Scotland (being urged thereto by his Highland Duchess); and near his shooting-lodge a man who had been “out” with Prince Charlie in 1745 was still living when Charles Russell first visited Speyside.  Westminster was the Russells’ hereditary school, and Charles Russell was duly subjected to the austere discipline which there prevailed.  From the trials of gerund-grinding and fagging and flogging a temporary relief was afforded by the Coronation of George IV., at which he officiated as Page to the acting Lord Great Chamberlain.  It was the last Coronation at which the procession was formed in Westminster Hall and moved across to the Abbey.  Young Russell, by mischievousness or carelessness, contrived to tear his master’s train from the ermine cape which surmounted it; and the procession was delayed till a seamstress could be found to repair the damage.  “I contrived to keep that old rascal George IV. off the throne for half an hour,” was Lord Charles-Russell’s boast in maturer age.[*]

[Footnote *:  J, W. Croker, recording the events of the day, says:  “The King had to wait full half an hour for the Great Chamberlain, Lord Gwydyr, who, it seems, had torn his robes, and was obliged to wait to have them mended.  I daresay the public lays the blame of the delay on to the King, who was ready long before anyone else,”—­The Croker Papers, vol. i., p. 195.]

From Westminster Lord Charles passed to the University of Edinburgh, where his brother John had preceded him.  He boarded with Professor Pillans, whom Byron gibbeted as “paltry"[*] in “English Bards and Scotch Reviewers,” and enjoyed the society of the literary circle which in those days made Edinburgh famous.  The authorship of the Waverley Novels was not yet revealed, and young Russell had the pleasure of discussing with Sir Walter Scott the dramatic qualities of The Bride of Lammermoor.  He was, perhaps, less unfitted for such high converse than most lads would be, because, as Lord Holland’s godson, he had been from his schooldays a frequenter of Holland House in its days of glory.[**]

[Footnote *:  Why?]

[Footnote **:  On his first visit Lord Holland told him that he might order his own dinner.  He declared for a roast duck with green peas, and an apricot tart; whereupon the old Amphitryon said:  “Decide as wisely on every question in life, and you will never go far wrong.”]

On leaving Edinburgh, Lord Charles Russell joined the Blues, then commanded by Ernest, Duke of Cumberland, afterwards King of Hanover; and he was able to confirm, by personal knowledge, the strange tales of designs which the Duke entertained for placing himself or his son upon the throne of England.[*] He subsequently exchanged into the 52nd Light Infantry, from which he retired, with the rank of Lieutenant-Colonel, in order to enter Parliament.  In December, 1832, he was returned at the head of the poll for Bedfordshire, and on Christmas Eve a young lady (who in 1834 became his wife) wrote thus to her sister: 

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Prime Ministers and Some Others from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.