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.

(1076) Princess Mary of England, daughter of George the Second; married in 1740 to the Prince of Hesse Cassel, who treated her with great inhumanity.  She died in June, 1771.-E.

(1077) The young Prince de Craon was killed at the head of his regiment at the battle of Fontenoy.-D.

425 Letter 171 To sir Horace Mann.  Arlington Street, July 12, 1745.

I am charmed with the sentiments that Mr. Chute expresses for you; but then you have lost him!  Here is an answer to his letter; I send it unsealed, to avoid repealing what I have thought on our affairs.  Seal it and send it.  Its being open, prevented my saying half so much about you as I should have done.

There is no more news — the Great Duke’s victory, of which we heard so much last week, is come to nothing!  So far from having defeated the Prince of Conti, it is not at all impossible but the Prince may wear the imperial coat of diamonds, though I am persuaded the care of that will be the chief concern of the Great Duke, (next to his own person,) in a battle.  Our army is retreated beyond Brussels; the French gather laurels, and towns, and prisoners, as one would a nosegay.  In the mean time you are bullying the King of Naples, in the person of the English fleet; and I think may possibly be doing so for two months after that very fleet belongs to the King of France; as astrologers tell one that we should see stars shine for I don’t know how long after they were annihilated.  But I like your spirit; keep it up!  Millamant, in the Way of the World, tells Mirabel, that she will be solicited to the very last; nay, and afterwards.  He replies, “What! after the last?”

I am in great pain about your arrears; it is a bad season for obtaining payment.  In the best times, they make a custom of paying foreign ministers Ill; which may be very politic, when they send men of too great fortunes abroad in order to lessen them:  but, my dear child, God knows that is not your case!

I have some extremely pretty dogs of King Charles’s breed, if I knew how to convey them to you:  indeed they are not Patapans.  I can’t tell how they would like travelling into Italy, when there is a prospect of the rest of their race returning from thence:  besides, you must certify me that none of them shall ever be married below themselves; for since the affair of Lady Caroline Fox, one durst not hazard the Duke of Richmond’s resentment even about a dog and bitch of that breed.

Lord Lempster(1078) is taken prisoner in the affair of the detachment to Ghent.  My lady,(1079) who has heard of Spartan mothers, (though you know she once asserted that nobody knew any thing of the Grecian Republics,) affects to bear it with a patriot insensibility.  She told me the other day that the Abb`e Niccolini and the eldest Pandolfini are coming to England:  is it true?  I shall be very Clad to be civil to them, especially to the latter, who, you know, was one of my friends.

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The Letters of Horace Walpole, Earl of Orford — Volume 1 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.