We have a new opera by Pescetti, but a very bad one; however, all the town runs after it, for it ends with a charming dance.(435) They have flung open the stage to a great length, and made a perfect view of Venice, with the Rialto, and numbers of gondolas that row about full of masks, who land and dance. You would like it.
Well, I have done. Excuse me if I don’t take the trouble to read it all over again, for it is immense, as you will find. Good night!
(414) Sir Robert Wilmot also, in a letter to the Duke of Devonshire, written on the 12th, Sir Robert was today observed to be more naturally gay and full of spirits than he has been for some time past."-E.
(415) HUme Campbell was twin brother of Hugh, third
Earl of Marchmont. They were
sons of Alexander, the second earl,
who had quarrelled with Sir Robert Walpole at the
time of the excise scheme
in 1733. Sir Robert, in consequence, prevented
him from being reelected
one of the sixteen representative Scotch peers in
1734; in requital for which,
the
old earl’s two sons became the
bitterest opponents of the Minister. They were
both
men
of considerable talents; extremely similar in
their characters and dispositions, and so much so
in their outward appearance that it was very difficult
to know them apart.-D. The estimation in which
Lord Marchmont was held by his contemporaries, maybe
judged of by the fact,
that Lord Cobham gave his bust a place in the Temple
of Worthies, at Stowe,
and the mention of him in Pope’s inscription
in his grotto at Twickenham;-
“Where British siglis from dying Wyndham stole, And the bright flame was shot through Marchmont’s soul.”
We are told by Coxe, that Sir Robert Walpole “used frequently to rally his sons, who were praising the speeches of Pultney, Pitt, Lyttelton, and others, by saying, “You may cry up their speeches if you please, but when I have answered Sir John Barnard and Lord Polwarth, I think I have concluded the debate.”]
(416) Glover, a merchant, author of “Leonidas,” a poem, “Boadicea,” a tragedy, etc. [Glover’s talent for public speaking, and information concerning trade and Commerce, naturally pointed him out to the merchants of London to conduct their application to parliament on the neglect of their trade.]
(417) Lord Vere, Lord Henry, and Lord Sidney Beauclerc, sons of the Duchess Dowager of St. Albans, who is painted among the beauties at Hampton Court.
(418) Lady Diana Vere, daughter, and at length sole heir, of Aubrey de Vere, twentieth and last Earl of Oxford. She married, in 1694, Charles, first Duke of St. Albans, natural son of Charles ii. by Nell Gwin. She died Jan. 15, 1742.


