The Letters of Horace Walpole, Earl of Orford — Volume 2 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,000 pages of information about The Letters of Horace Walpole, Earl of Orford — Volume 2.

The Letters of Horace Walpole, Earl of Orford — Volume 2 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,000 pages of information about The Letters of Horace Walpole, Earl of Orford — Volume 2.

(896) Alluding to the expedition against Rochefort, the year before, in which Mr. Conway was second in command.

(897) Lady Mary Bruce, Duchess of Richmond, only child of the Countess of Ailesbury by her first marriage.  She was at Park-place with her mother during the Duke of Richmond’s absence, who was a volunteer upon this expedition

427 Letter 266 To The Earl Of Strafford.  Arlington Street, June 16, 1758.

My dear lord, Dear lord, I stayed to write to you, in obedience to your commands, till I had something worth telling you.  St. Maloes is taken by storm.  The Governor leaped into the sea at the very name of the Duke of Marlborough.  Sir James Lowther put his hand into his pocket, and gave the soldiers two hundred and fifty thousand pounds to drink the King’s health on the top of the great church.  Norborne Berkeley begged the favour of the Bishop to go back with him and see his house in Gloucestershire.  Delaval is turned capuchin, with remorse, for having killed four thousand French with his own hand.  Commodore Howe does nothing but talk of what he has done.  Lord Downe, who has killed the intendant, has sent for Dupr`e(898) to put in his place; and my Lord Anson has ravished three abbesses, the youngest of whom was eighty-five.  Sure, my lord, this account is glorious enough!  Don’t you think one might ’bate a little of it?  How much will you give up?  Will you compound for the town capitulating, and for threescore men of war and two hundred privateers burned in the harbour?  I would fain beat you down as low as I could.  What, if we should not have taken the town?  Shall you be very much shocked, if, after burning two ships of fifty-four and thirty-six guns, and a bushel of privateers and smallware, we had thought it prudent to leave the town where we found it, and had re-embarked last Monday in seven hours, (the despatch of which implies at least as much precipitation as conduct,) and that of all the large bill of fare above, nothing should be true but Downe’s killing the intendant; who coming out to reconnoitre, and not surrendering, Downe, at the head of some grenadiers, shot him dead.  In truth, this is all the truth, as it came in the middle Of the night; and if your lordship is obstinately bent on the conquest of France, you must wait till we have found another loophole into it, which it seems our fleet is gone to look for.  I fear it is not even true that we have beat them in the Mediterranean! nor have I any hopes but in Admiral Forbes, who must sail up the Rhone, burn Lyons, and force them to a peace at once.

I hope you have had as favourable Succession of sun and rain as we have.  I go to Park-place next week, where I fancy I Shall find our little Duchess(899) quite content with the prospect of recovering her Duke, without his being provided with laurels like a boar’s head.  Adieu! my dear lord.  My best compliments to my lady and her whole menagerie.

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The Letters of Horace Walpole, Earl of Orford — Volume 2 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.