The Letters of Horace Walpole, Earl of Orford — Volume 1 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,070 pages of information about The Letters of Horace Walpole, Earl of Orford — Volume 1.

The Letters of Horace Walpole, Earl of Orford — Volume 1 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,070 pages of information about The Letters of Horace Walpole, Earl of Orford — Volume 1.

(791) Doctor lancelot Blackburne.  Walpole, in his Memoires, vol. i. p. 74, calls him “the jolly old archbishop, who had the manners of a man of quality, though he had been a buccaneer, and was a clergyman.”  Noble, in his continuation of Granger, treats these aspersions as the effect of malice.  “How is it possible!” he asks, ,that a buccaneer should be so great a scholar as Blackburne certainly was? he who had so perfect a knowledge of the classics, as to be able to read them with the same ease as he could Shakspeare, must have taken great pains to have acquired the learned languages, and have had both leisure and good masters.”  He is allowed to have been a remarkably pleasant man; and it was said of him, that “he gained more hearts than souls."-E.

(792) He was not succeeded by Dr. Wilcox, but by Dr. Herring, who was elevated, in 1747, to the archbishopric of Canterbury, and died in 1757.-E.

(793) a Signor Capponi, brother of Madame Grifoni.

315 Letter 102
To Sir Horace Mann. 
Monday, April 4, 1743.

I had my pen in my hand all last Thursday morning to write to you, but my pen had nothing to say.  I would make it do something to-day though what will come of it, I don’t conceive.

They say, the King does not go abroad:  we know nothing about our army.  I suppose it is gone to blockade Egra, and to not take Prague, as it has been the fashion for every body to send their army to do these three years.  The officers in parliament are not gone yet.  We have nothing to do, but I believe the ministry have something for us to do, for we are continually adjourned, but not prorogued.  They talk of marrying Princess Caroline and Louisa to the future Kings of Sweden and Denmark; but if the latter(794) is King of both, I don’t apprehend that he is to marry both the Princesses in his double capacity.

Herring, Of Bangor, the youngest bishop, is named to the see of York. it looks as if the bench thought the church going out of fashion; for two or three(795) of them have refused this mitre.

Next Thursday we are to be entertained with a pompous parade for the burial of old Princess Buckingham.  They have invited ten peeresses to walk:  all somehow or other dashed with blood-royal, and rather than not have King James’s daughter attended by princesses, they have fished out two or three countesses descended from his competitor Monmouth.

There, I am at the end of my tell!  If I write on, it must be to ask questions.  I Would ask why Mr. Chute has left me off but when he sees what a frippery correspondent I am, he will scarce be in haste to renew with me again.  I really don’t know why I am so dry; mine used to be the pen of a ready writer, but whist seems to have stretched its leaden wand over me too, who have nothing to do with it.  I am trying to set up the noble game of bilboquet against it, and composing a grammar in opposition to Mr. Hoyle’s.  You will some day or other see an advertisement in the papers, to tell you where it may be bought, and that ladies may be waited upon by the author at their houses, to receive any further directions.  I am ’really ashamed to send this scantling of paper by the post, over so many seas and mountains:  it seems as impertinent as the commission which Prior gave to the winds,

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