The Letters of Horace Walpole, Earl of Orford — Volume 4 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,055 pages of information about The Letters of Horace Walpole, Earl of Orford — Volume 4.

The Letters of Horace Walpole, Earl of Orford — Volume 4 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,055 pages of information about The Letters of Horace Walpole, Earl of Orford — Volume 4.

I am out of materials for my press.  I am thinking of printing some numbers of miscellaneous MSS. from my own and Mr. Gray’s collection.  If you have any among your stores that are historic, new and curious, and like to have them printed, I shall be glad of them.  Among Gray’s are letters of Sir Thomas Wyat the elder.(72) I am sure you must have a thousand hints about him.  If you will send them to me I will do you justice; as you will see I have in King Edward’s Letters.  Do you know any thing of his son,(73) the insurgent, in Queen Mary’s reign?

I do not know whether it was not to Payne the bookseller, but I am sure I gave somebody a very few notes to the British Topography.  They were indeed of very little consequence.

I have got to-day, and am reading with entertainment, two vols. in octavo, the Lives of Leland, Hearne, and Antony Wood.,(74) I do not know the author, but he is of Oxford.  I think you should add that of your friend Brown Willis.(75) There is a queer piece on Freemasonry in one of the volumes, said to be written, on very slender authority, by Henry VI. with notes by Mr. Locke:  a very odd conjunction!  It says that Arts were brought from the East by Peter Gower.  As I am sure you will not find an account of this singular person in all your collections, be it known to you, that Peter Gower was commonly called Pythagoras.  I remember our newspapers insisting that Thomas Kouli Khan was an Irishman, and that his true name was Thomas Callaghan.

On reading over my letter, I find I am no sceptic, having affirmed no less than four times, that I am sure.  Though this is extremely awkward, I am sure I will not write my letter over again; so pray excuse or burn my tautology.

P. S. I had like to have forgotten the most obliging, and to me the most interesting part of your letter-your kind offer of coming hither.  I accept it most gladly; but, for reasons I will tell you, wish it may be deferred a little.  I am going to Park-place (General Conway’s), then to Ampthill (Lord Ossory’s), and then to Goodwood (Duke of Richmond’s); and the beginning of August to Wentworth Castle (Marquis of Rockingham’s); so that I shall not be at all settled here till the end of the latter month.  But I have a stronger reason.  By that time will be finished a delightful chapel I am building in my garden, to contain the shrine of Capoccio, and the Window with Henry iii. and his Queen.  My new bedchamber will be finished too, which is now all in litter:  and, besides, September is a quiet month; visits to make or receive are over, and the troublesome go to shoot partridges.  If that time suits you, pray assure me I shall see you on the first of September.

(71) “Copies of seven original Letters from King Edward VI. to Barnaby Fitzpatrick.”  Strawberry Hill, 1772.-E.

(72) He was the contemporary and friend of Surrey, and was accused by Henry viii. of being the paramour of Anne Boleyn; but the King’s suspicion dying away, he was appointed, in 1537, Henry’s ambassador to the Emperor.  His poems have recently been published in the Aldine edition of the Poets; and in the Biographical Preface to them are included some of his admirable letters.-E.

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The Letters of Horace Walpole, Earl of Orford — Volume 4 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.