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+ PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd" >
+
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <title>
+ The Journal to Stella, by Jonathan Swift
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
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+ hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
+ blockquote {font-size: 97%; font-style: italic; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
+ div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; }
+ div.middle { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; }
+ .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;}
+ .figright {float: right; margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 1%;}
+ .pagenum {display:inline; font-size: 70%; font-style:normal;
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+ text-align: right;}
+ pre { font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;}
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+ </head>
+ <body>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Journal to Stella, by Jonathan Swift
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Journal to Stella
+
+Author: Jonathan Swift
+
+Release Date: January 28, 2010 [EBook #4208]
+Last Updated: February 6, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE JOURNAL TO STELLA ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Les Bowler, and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ THE JOURNAL TO STELLA
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ By Jonathan Swift
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ With preface, introduction and notes by George A. Aitken.
+ </h3>
+ <div class="mynote">
+ <p>
+ (Numbers thus (5) refer to the Notes at the end, which are arranged by
+ "Introduction" or by "Letter 'number'".)
+ </p>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <big><b>CONTENTS</b></big>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <a href="#link2H_PREF"> PREFACE </a><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_INTR"> INTRODUCTION. </a><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0003"> <b>JOURNAL TO STELLA</b> </a><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_NOTE"> <b>NOTES.</b> </a><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0004"> LETTER 1. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> LETTER 2. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0006"> LETTER 3. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0007"> LETTER 4. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0008"> LETTER 5. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0009"> LETTER 6. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0010"> LETTER 7. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0011"> LETTER 8. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0012"> LETTER 9. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0013"> LETTER 10. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0014"> LETTER 11. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0015"> LETTER 12. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0016"> LETTER 13. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0017"> LETTER 14. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0018"> LETTER 15. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0019"> LETTER 16. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0020"> LETTER 17. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0021"> LETTER 18. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0022"> LETTER 19. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0023"> LETTER 20. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0024"> LETTER 21. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0025"> LETTER 22. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0026"> LETTER 23. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0027"> LETTER 24. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0028"> LETTER 25. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0029"> LETTER 26. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0030"> LETTER 27. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0031"> LETTER 28. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0032"> LETTER 29. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0033"> LETTER 30. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0034"> LETTER 31. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0035"> LETTER 32. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0036"> LETTER 33. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0037"> LETTER 34. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0038"> LETTER 35. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0039"> LETTER 36. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0040"> LETTER 37. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0041"> LETTER 38. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0042"> LETTER 39. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0043"> LETTER 40. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0044"> LETTER 41. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0045"> LETTER 42. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0046"> LETTER 43. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0047"> LETTER 44. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0048"> LETTER 45. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0049"> LETTER 46. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0050"> LETTER 47. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0051"> LETTER 48. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0052"> LETTER 49. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0053"> LETTER 50. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0054"> LETTER 51. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0055"> LETTER 52. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0056"> LETTER 53. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0057"> LETTER 54. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0058"> LETTER 55. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0059"> LETTER 56. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0060"> LETTER 57. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0061"> LETTER 58. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0062"> LETTER 59. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0063"> LETTER 60. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0064"> LETTER 61. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0065"> LETTER 62. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0066"> LETTER 63. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0067"> LETTER 64. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0068"> LETTER 65. </a>
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#link2H_NOTE"> <b>NOTES.</b> </a><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_NOTE1"> Notes to the Introduction. </a><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0071"> LETTER 1. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0072"> LETTER 9. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0073"> LETTER 10. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0074"> LETTER 11. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0075"> LETTER 12. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0076"> LETTER 13. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0077"> LETTER 14. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0078"> LETTER 15. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0079"> LETTER 16. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0080"> LETTER 17. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0081"> LETTER 18. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0082"> LETTER 20. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0083"> LETTER 21. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0084"> LETTER 22. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0085"> LETTER 23. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0086"> LETTER 24. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0087"> LETTER 26. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0088"> LETTER 27. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0089"> LETTER 28. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0090"> LETTER 29. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0091"> LETTER 30. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0092"> LETTER 31. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0093"> LETTER 32. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0094"> LETTER 33. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0095"> LETTER 34. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0096"> LETTER 35. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0097"> LETTER 36. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0098"> LETTER 37. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0099"> LETTER 38. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0100"> LETTER 39. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0101"> LETTER 41. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0102"> LETTER 42. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0103"> LETTER 43. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0104"> LETTER 44. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0105"> LETTER 46. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0106"> LETTER 47. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0107"> LETTER 48. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0108"> LETTER 49. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0109"> LETTER 50. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0110"> LETTER 51. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0111"> LETTER 52. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0112"> LETTER 53. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0113"> LETTER 54. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0114"> LETTER 55. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0115"> LETTER 56. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0116"> LETTER 57. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0117"> LETTER 58. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0118"> LETTER 59. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0119"> LETTER 61. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0120"> LETTER 62. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0121"> LETTER 63. </a>
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_PREF" id="link2H_PREF">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ PREFACE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The history of the publication of the Journal to Stella is somewhat
+ curious. On Swift's death twenty-five of the letters, forming the closing
+ portion of the series, fell into the hands of Dr. Lyon, a clergyman who
+ had been in charge of Swift for some years. The letters passed to a man
+ named Wilkes, who sold them for publication. They accordingly appeared in
+ 1766 in the tenth volume of Dr. Hawkesworth's quarto edition of Swift's
+ works; but the editor made many changes in the text, including a
+ suppression of most of the "little language." The publishers, however,
+ fortunately for us, were public-spirited enough to give the manuscripts
+ (with one exception) to the British Museum, where, after many years, they
+ were examined by John Forster, who printed in his unfinished "Life of
+ Swift" numerous passages from the originals, showing the manner in which
+ the text had been tampered with by Hawkesworth. Swift himself, too, in his
+ later years, obliterated many words and sentences in the letters, and
+ Forster was able to restore not a few of these omissions. His zeal,
+ however, sometimes led him to make guesses at words which are quite
+ undecipherable. Besides Forster's work, I have had the benefit of the
+ careful collation made by Mr. Ryland for his edition of 1897. Where these
+ authorities differ I have usually found myself in agreement with Mr.
+ Ryland, but I have felt justified in accepting some of Forster's readings
+ which were rejected by him as uncertain; and the examination of the
+ manuscripts has enabled me to make some additions and corrections of my
+ own. Swift's writing is extremely small, and abounds in abbreviations. The
+ difficulty of arriving at the true reading is therefore considerable,
+ apart from the erasures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The remainder of the Journal, consisting of the first forty letters, was
+ published in 1768 by Deane Swift, Dr. Swift's second cousin. These letters
+ had been given to Mrs. Whiteway in 1788, and by her to her son-in-law,
+ Deane Swift. The originals have been lost, with the exception of the
+ first, which, by some accident, is in the British Museum; but it is
+ evident that Deane Swift took even greater liberties with the text than
+ Hawkesworth. He substituted for "Ppt" the word "Stella," a name which
+ Swift seems not to have used until some years later; he adopted the name
+ "Presto" for Swift, and in other ways tried to give a greater literary
+ finish to the letters. The whole of the correspondence was first brought
+ together, under the title of the "Journal to Stella", in Sheridan's
+ edition of 1784.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Previous editions of the Journal have been but slightly annotated. Swift's
+ letters abound with allusions to people of all classes with whom he came
+ in contact in London, and to others known to Esther Johnson in Ireland;
+ and a large proportion of these persons have been passed over in discreet
+ silence by Sir Walter Scott and others. The task of the annotator has, of
+ course, been made easier of late years by the publication of contemporary
+ journals and letters, and of useful works of reference dealing with
+ Parliament, the Army, the Church, the Civil Service, and the like, besides
+ the invaluable Dictionary of National Biography. I have also been assisted
+ by a collection of MS. notes kindly placed at my disposal by Mr. Thomas
+ Seccombe. I have aimed at brevity and relevance, but it is hoped that the
+ reader will find all the information that is necessary. Here and there a
+ name has baffled research, but I have been able to give definite
+ particulars of a very large number of people&mdash;noblemen and ladies in
+ society in London or Dublin, Members of Parliament, doctors, clergymen,
+ Government officials, and others who have hitherto been but names to the
+ reader of the Journal. I have corrected a good many errors in the older
+ notes, but in dealing with so large a number of persons, some of whom it
+ is difficult to identify, I cannot hope that I myself have escaped
+ pitfalls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ G. A. A. <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_INTR" id="link2H_INTR">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ INTRODUCTION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ When Swift began to write the letters known as the Journal to Stella, he
+ was forty-two years of age, and Esther Johnson twenty-nine. Perhaps the
+ most useful introduction to the correspondence will be a brief setting
+ forth of what is known of their friendship from Stella's childhood, the
+ more specially as the question has been obscured by many assertions and
+ theories resting on a very slender basis of fact.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jonathan Swift, born in 1667 after his father's death, was educated by his
+ uncle Godwin, and after a not very successful career at Trinity College,
+ Dublin, went to stay with his mother, Abigail Erick, at Leicester. Mrs.
+ Swift feared that her son would fall in love with a girl named Betty
+ Jones, but, as Swift told a friend, he had had experience enough "not to
+ think of marriage till I settle my fortune in the world, which I am sure
+ will not be in some years; and even then, I am so hard to please that I
+ suppose I shall put it off to the other world." Soon afterwards an opening
+ for Swift presented itself. Sir William Temple, now living in retirement
+ at Moor Park, near Farnham, had been, like his father, Master of the Irish
+ Rolls, and had thus become acquainted with Swift's uncle Godwin. Moreover,
+ Lady Temple was related to Mrs. Swift, as Lord Orrery tells us. Thanks to
+ these facts, the application to Sir William Temple was successful, and
+ Swift went to live at Moor Park before the end of 1689. There he read to
+ Temple, wrote for him, and kept his accounts, and growing into confidence
+ with his employer, "was often trusted with matters of great importance."
+ The story&mdash;afterwards improved upon by Lord Macaulay&mdash;that Swift
+ received only 20 pounds and his board, and was not allowed to sit at table
+ with his master, is wholly untrustworthy. Within three years of their
+ first intercourse, Temple had introduced his secretary to William the
+ Third, and sent him to London to urge the King to consent to a bill for
+ triennial Parliaments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Swift took up his residence at Moor Park he found there a little girl
+ of eight, daughter of a merchant named Edward Johnson, who had died young.
+ Swift says that Esther Johnson was born on March 18, 1681; in the parish
+ register of Richmond,(1) which shows that she was baptized on March 20,
+ 1680-81, her name is given as Hester; but she signed her will "Esther,"
+ the name by which she was always known. Swift says, "Her father was a
+ younger brother of a good family in Nottinghamshire, her mother of a lower
+ degree; and indeed she had little to boast in her birth." Mrs. Johnson had
+ two children, Esther and Ann, and lived at Moor Park as companion to Lady
+ Giffard, Temple's widowed sister. Another member of the household,
+ afterwards to be Esther's constant companion, was Rebecca Dingley, a
+ relative of the Temple family.(2) She was a year or two older than Swift.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lonely young man of twenty-two was both playfellow and teacher of the
+ delicate child of eight. How he taught her to write has been charmingly
+ brought before us in the painting exhibited by Miss Dicksee at the Royal
+ Academy a few years ago; he advised her what books to read, and instructed
+ her, as he says, "in the principles of honour and virtue, from which she
+ never swerved in any one action or moment of her life."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By 1694 Swift had grown tired of his position, and finding that Temple,
+ who valued his services, was slow in finding him preferment, he left Moor
+ Park in order to carry out his resolve to go into the Church. He was
+ ordained, and obtained the prebend of Kilroot, near Belfast, where he
+ carried on a flirtation with a Miss Waring, whom he called Varina. But in
+ May 1696 Temple made proposals which induced Swift to return to Moor Park,
+ where he was employed in preparing Temple's memoirs and correspondence for
+ publication, and in supporting the side taken by Temple in the Letters of
+ Phalaris controversy by writing The Battle of the Books, which was,
+ however, not published until 1704. On his return to Temple's house, Swift
+ found his old playmate grown from a sickly child into a girl of fifteen,
+ in perfect health. She came, he says, to be "looked upon as one of the
+ most beautiful, graceful, and agreeable young women in London, only a
+ little too fat. Her hair was blacker than a raven, and every feature of
+ her face in perfection."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On his death in January 1699, Temple left a will,(3) dated 1694, directing
+ the payment of 20 pounds each, with half a year's wages, to Bridget
+ Johnson "and all my other servants"; and leaving a lease of some land in
+ Monistown, County Wicklow, to Esther Johnson, "servant to my sister
+ Giffard." By a codicil of February 1698, Temple left 100 pounds to "Mr.
+ Jonathan Swift, now living with me." It may be added that by her will of
+ 1722, proved in the following year, Lady Giffard gave 20 pounds to Mrs.
+ Moss&mdash;Mrs. Bridget Johnson, who had married Richard Mose or Moss,
+ Lady Giffard's steward. The will proceeds: "To Mrs. Hester (sic) Johnson I
+ give 10 pounds, with the 100 pounds I put into the Exchequer for her life
+ and my own, and declare the 100 pounds to be hers which I am told is there
+ in my name upon the survivorship, and for which she has constantly sent
+ over her certificate and received the interest. I give her besides my two
+ little silver candlesticks."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Temple left in Swift's hands the task of publishing his posthumous works,
+ a duty which afterwards led to a quarrel with Lady Giffard and other
+ members of the family. Many years later Swift told Lord Palmerston that he
+ stopped at Moor Park solely for the benefit of Temple's conversation and
+ advice, and the opportunity of pursuing his studies. At Temple's death he
+ was "as far to seek as ever." In the summer of 1699, however, he was
+ offered and accepted the post of secretary and chaplain to the Earl of
+ Berkeley, one of the Lords Justices, but when he reached Ireland he found
+ that the secretaryship had been given to another. He soon, however,
+ obtained the living of Laracor, Agher, and Rathbeggan, and the prebend of
+ Dunlavin in St. Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin. The total value of these
+ preferments was about 230 pounds a year, an income which Miss Waring seems
+ to have thought enough to justify him in marrying. Swift's reply to the
+ lady whom he had "singled out at first from the rest of women" could only
+ have been written with the intention of breaking off the connection, and
+ accordingly we hear no more of poor Varina.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Laracor, a mile or two from Trim, and twenty miles from Dublin, Swift
+ ministered to a congregation of about fifteen persons, and had abundant
+ leisure for cultivating his garden, making a canal (after the Dutch
+ fashion of Moor Park), planting willows, and rebuilding the vicarage. As
+ chaplain to Lord Berkeley, he spent much of his time in Dublin. He was on
+ intimate terms with Lady Berkeley and her daughters, one of whom is best
+ known by her married name of Lady Betty Germaine; and through them he had
+ access to the fashionable society of Dublin. When Lord Berkeley returned
+ to England in April 1701, Swift, after taking his Doctor's degree at
+ Dublin, went with him, and soon afterwards published, anonymously, a
+ political pamphlet, A Discourse on the Contests and Dissentions in Athens
+ and Rome. When he returned to Ireland in September he was accompanied by
+ Stella&mdash;to give Esther Johnson the name by which she is best known&mdash;and
+ her friend Mrs. Dingley. Stella's fortune was about 1500 pounds, and the
+ property Temple had left her was in County Wicklow. Swift, very much for
+ his "own satisfaction, who had few friends or acquaintance in Ireland,"
+ persuaded Stella&mdash;now twenty years old&mdash;that living was cheaper
+ there than in England, and that a better return was obtainable on money.
+ The ladies took his advice, and made Ireland their home. At first they
+ felt themselves strangers in Dublin; "the adventure looked so like a
+ frolic," Swift says, "the censure held for some time as if there were a
+ secret history in such a removal: which however soon blew off by her
+ excellent conduct." Swift took every step that was possible to avoid
+ scandal. When he was away, the ladies occupied his rooms; when he
+ returned, they went into their own lodgings. When he was absent, they
+ often stopped at the vicarage at Laracor, but if he were there, they moved
+ to Trim, where they visited the vicar, Dr. Raymond, or lived in lodgings
+ in the town or neighbourhood. Swift was never with Stella except in the
+ presence of a third person, and in 1726 he said that he had not seen her
+ in a morning "these dozen years, except once or twice in a journey."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During a visit to England in the winter of 1703-4 we find Swift in
+ correspondence with the Rev. William Tisdall, a Dublin incumbent whom he
+ had formerly known at Belfast. Tisdall was on friendly terms with Stella
+ and Mrs. Dingley, and Swift sent messages to them through him. "Pray put
+ them upon reading," he wrote, "and be always teaching something to Mrs.
+ Johnson, because she is good at comprehending, remembering and retaining."
+ But the correspondence soon took a different turn. Tisdall paid his
+ addresses to Stella, and charged Swift with opposing his suit. Tisdall's
+ letters are missing, but Swift's reply of April 20, 1704, puts things
+ sufficiently clearly. "My conjecture is," he says, "that you think I
+ obstructed your inclinations to please my own, and that my intentions were
+ the same with yours. In answer to all which I will, upon my conscience and
+ honour, tell you the naked truth. First, I think I have said to you before
+ that, if my fortunes and humour served me to think of that state, I should
+ certainly, among all persons upon earth, make your choice; because I never
+ saw that person whose conversation I entirely valued but hers; this was
+ the utmost I ever gave way to. And secondly, I must assure you sincerely
+ that this regard of mine never once entered into my head to be an
+ impediment to you." He had thought Tisdall not rich enough to marry; "but
+ the objection of your fortune being removed, I declare I have no other;
+ nor shall any consideration of my own misfortune, in losing so good a
+ friend and companion as her, prevail on me, against her interest and
+ settlement in the world, since it is held so necessary and convenient a
+ thing for ladies to marry, and that time takes off from the lustre of
+ virgins in all other eyes but mine. I appeal to my letters to herself
+ whether I was your friend or not in the whole concern, though the part I
+ designed to act in it was purely passive." He had even thought "it could
+ not be decently broken," without disadvantage to the lady's credit, since
+ he supposed it was known to the town; and he had always spoken of her in a
+ manner far from discouraging. Though he knew many ladies of rank, he had
+ "nowhere met with an humour, a wit, or conversation so agreeable, a better
+ portion of good sense, or a truer judgment of men or things." He envied
+ Tisdall his prudence and temper, and love of peace and settlement, "the
+ reverse of which has been the great uneasiness of my life, and is likely
+ to continue so."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This letter has been quoted at some length because of its great
+ importance. It is obviously capable of various interpretations, and some,
+ like Dr. Johnson, have concluded that Swift was resolved to keep Stella in
+ his power, and therefore prevented an advantageous match by making
+ unreasonable demands. I cannot see any ground for this interpretation,
+ though it is probable that Tisdall's appearance as a suitor was
+ sufficiently annoying. There is no evidence that Stella viewed Tisdall's
+ proposal with any favour, unless it can be held to be furnished by Swift's
+ belief that the town thought&mdash;rightly or wrongly&mdash;that there was
+ an engagement. In any case, there could be no mistake in future with
+ regard to Swift's attitude towards Stella. She was dearer to him than
+ anyone else, and his feeling for her would not change, but for marriage he
+ had neither fortune nor humour. Tisdall consoled himself by marrying
+ another lady two years afterwards; and though for a long time Swift
+ entertained for him feelings of dislike, in later life their relations
+ improved, and Tisdall was one of the witnesses to Swift's will.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Tale of a Tub was published in 1704, and Swift was soon in constant
+ intercourse with Addison and the other wits. While he was in England in
+ 1705, Stella and Mrs. Dingley made a short visit to London. This and a
+ similar visit in 1708 are the only occasions on which Stella is known to
+ have left Ireland after taking up her residence in that country. Swift's
+ influence over women was always very striking. Most of the toasts of the
+ day were his friends, and he insisted that any lady of wit and quality who
+ desired his acquaintance should make the first advances. This, he says&mdash;writing
+ in 1730&mdash;had been an established rule for over twenty years. In 1708
+ a dispute on this question with one toast, Mrs. Long, was referred for
+ settlement to Ginckel Vanhomrigh, the son of the house where it was
+ proposed that the meeting should take place; and by the decision&mdash;which
+ was in Swift's favour&mdash;"Mrs. Vanhomrigh and her fair daughter Hessy"
+ were forbidden to aid Mrs. Long in her disobedience for the future. This
+ is the first that we hear of Hester or Esther Vanhomrigh, who was
+ afterwards to play so marked a part in the story of Swift's life. Born on
+ February 14, 1690, she was now eighteen. Her father, Bartholomew
+ Vanhomrigh, a Dublin merchant of Dutch origin, had died in 1703, leaving
+ his wife a fortune of some sixteen thousand pounds. On the income from
+ this money Mrs. Vanhomrigh, with her two daughters, Hester and Mary, were
+ able to mix in fashionable society in London. Swift was introduced to them
+ by Sir Andrew Fountaine early in 1708, but evidently Stella did not make
+ their acquaintance, nor indeed hear much, if anything, of them until the
+ time of the Journal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swift's visit to London in 1707-9 had for its object the obtaining for the
+ Irish Church of the surrender by the Crown of the First-Fruits and
+ Twentieths, which brought in about 2500 pounds a year. Nothing came of
+ Swift's interviews with the Whig statesmen, and after many disappointments
+ he returned to Laracor (June 1709), and conversed with none but Stella and
+ her card-playing friends, and Addison, now secretary to Lord Wharton.(4)
+ Next year came the fall of the Whigs, and a request to Swift from the
+ Irish bishops that he would renew the application for the First-Fruits, in
+ the hope that there would be greater success with the Tories. Swift
+ reached London in September 1710, and began the series of letters, giving
+ details of the events of each day, which now form the Journal to Stella.
+ "I will write something every day to MD," he says, "and make it a sort of
+ journal; and when it is full I will send it, whether MD writes or no; and
+ so that will be pretty; and I shall always be in conversation with MD, and
+ MD with Presto." It is interesting to note that by way of caution these
+ letters were usually addressed to Mrs. Dingley, and not to Stella.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The story of Swift's growing intimacy with the Tory leaders, of the
+ success of his mission, of the increasing coolness towards older
+ acquaintances, and of his services to the Government, can best be read in
+ the Journal itself. In the meantime the intimacy with the Vanhomrighs grew
+ rapidly. They were near neighbours of Swift's, and in a few weeks after
+ his arrival in town we find frequent allusions to the dinners at their
+ house (where he kept his best gown and periwig), sometimes with the
+ explanation that he went there "out of mere listlessness," or because it
+ was wet, or because another engagement had broken down. Only thrice does
+ he mention the "eldest daughter": once on her birthday; once on the
+ occasion of a trick played him, when he received a message that she was
+ suddenly very ill ("I rattled off the daughter"); and once to state that
+ she was come of age, and was going to Ireland to look after her fortune.
+ There is evidence that "Miss Essy," or Vanessa, to give her the name by
+ which she will always be known, was in correspondence with Swift in July
+ 1710&mdash;while he was still in Ireland&mdash;and in the spring of
+ 1711;(5) and early in 1711 Stella seems to have expressed surprise at
+ Swift's intimacy with the family, for in February he replied, "You say
+ they are of no consequence; why, they keep as good female company as I do
+ male; I see all the drabs of quality at this end of the town with them."
+ In the autumn Swift seems to have thought that Vanessa was keeping company
+ with a certain Hatton, but Mrs. Long&mdash;possibly meaning to give him a
+ warning hint&mdash;remarked that if this were so "she is not the girl I
+ took her for; but to me she seems melancholy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1712 occasional letters took the place of the daily journal to "MD,"
+ but there is no change in the affectionate style in which Swift wrote. In
+ the spring he had a long illness, which affected him, indeed, throughout
+ the year. Other reasons which he gives for the falling off in his
+ correspondence are his numerous business engagements, and the hope of
+ being able to send some good news of an appointment for himself. There is
+ only one letter to Stella between July 19 and September 15, and Dr.
+ Birkbeck Hill argues that the poem "Cadenus and Vanessa" was composed at
+ that time.(6) If this be so, it must have been altered next year, because
+ it was not until 1713 that Swift was made a Dean. Writing on April 19,
+ 1726, Swift said that the poem "was written at Windsor near fourteen years
+ ago, and dated: it was a task performed on a frolic among some ladies, and
+ she it was addressed to died some time ago in Dublin, and on her death the
+ copy shewn by her executor." Several copies were in circulation, and he
+ was indifferent what was done with it; it was "only a cavalier business,"
+ and if those who would not give allowances were malicious, it was only
+ what he had long expected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From this letter it would appear that this remarkable poem was written in
+ the summer of 1712; whereas the title-page of the pamphlet says it was
+ "written at Windsor, 1713." Swift visited Windsor in both years, but he
+ had more leisure in 1712, and we know that Vanessa was also at Windsor in
+ that year. In that year, too, he was forty-four, the age mentioned in the
+ poem. Neither Swift nor Vanessa forgot this intercourse: years afterwards
+ Swift wrote to her, "Go over the scenes of Windsor.... Cad thinks often of
+ these"; and again, "Remember the indisposition at Windsor." We know that
+ this poem was revised in 1719, when in all probability Swift added the
+ lines to which most exception can be taken. Cadenus was to be Vanessa's
+ instructor:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "His conduct might have made him styled
+ A father, and the nymph his child."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ He had "grown old in politics and wit," and "in every scene had kept his
+ heart," so that he now "understood not what was love." But he had written
+ much, and Vanessa admired his wit. Cadenus found that her thoughts
+ wandered&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Though she seemed to listen more
+ To all he spoke than e'er before."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ When she confessed her love, he was filled with "shame, disappointment,
+ guilt, surprise." He had aimed only at cultivating the mind, and had
+ hardly known whether she was young or old. But he was flattered, and
+ though he could not give her love, he offered her friendship, "with
+ gratitude, respect, esteem." Vanessa took him at his word, and said she
+ would now be tutor, though he was not apt to learn:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "But what success Vanessa met
+ Is to the world a secret yet.
+ Whether the nymph to please her swain
+ Talks in a high romantic strain;
+ Or whether he at last descends
+ To act with less seraphic ends;
+ Or, to compound the business, whether
+ They temper love and books together,
+ Must never to mankind be told,
+ Nor shall the conscious Muse unfold."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Such is the poem as we now have it, written, it must be remembered, for
+ Vanessa's private perusal. It is to be regretted, for her own sake, that
+ she did not destroy it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swift received the reward of his services to the Government&mdash;the
+ Deanery of St. Patrick's, Dublin&mdash;in April 1713. Disappointed at what
+ he regarded as exile, he left London in June. Vanessa immediately began to
+ send him letters which brought home to him the extent of her passion; and
+ she hinted at jealousy in the words, "If you are very happy, it is
+ ill-natured of you not to tell me so, except 'tis what is inconsistent
+ with my own." In his reply Swift dwelt upon the dreariness of his
+ surroundings at Laracor, and reminded her that he had said he would
+ endeavour to forget everything in England, and would write as seldom as he
+ could.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swift was back again in the political strife in London in September,
+ taking Oxford's part in the quarrel between that statesman and
+ Bolingbroke. On the fall of the Tories at the death of Queen Anne, he saw
+ that all was over, and retired to Ireland, not to return again for twelve
+ years. In the meantime the intimacy with Vanessa had been renewed. Her
+ mother had died, leaving debts, and she pressed Swift for advice in the
+ management of her affairs. When she suggested coming to Ireland, where she
+ had property, he told her that if she took this step he would "see her
+ very seldom." However, she took up her abode at Celbridge, only a few
+ miles from Dublin. Swift gave her many cautions, out of "the perfect
+ esteem and friendship" he felt for her, but he often visited her. She was
+ dissatisfied, however, begging him to speak kindly, and at least to
+ counterfeit his former indulgent friendship. "What can be wrong," she
+ wrote, "in seeing and advising an unhappy young woman? You cannot but know
+ that your frowns make my life unsupportable." Sometimes he treated the
+ matter lightly; sometimes he showed annoyance; sometimes he assured her of
+ his esteem and love, but urged her not to make herself or him "unhappy by
+ imaginations." He was uniformly unsuccessful in stopping Vanessa's
+ importunity. He endeavoured, she said, by severities to force her from
+ him; she knew she was the cause of uneasy reflections to him; but nothing
+ would lessen her "inexpressible passion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unfortunately he failed&mdash;partly no doubt from mistaken considerations
+ of kindness, partly because he shrank from losing her affection&mdash;to
+ take effective steps to put an end to Vanessa's hopes. It would have been
+ better if he had unhesitatingly made it clear to her that he could not
+ return her passion, and that if she could not be satisfied with friendship
+ the intimacy must cease. To quote Sir Henry Craik, "The friendship had
+ begun in literary guidance: it was strengthened by flattery: it lived on a
+ cold and almost stern repression, fed by confidences as to literary
+ schemes, and by occasional literary compliments: but it never came to have
+ a real hold over Swift's heart."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With 1716 we come to the alleged marriage with Stella. In 1752, seven
+ years after Swift's death, Lord Orrery, in his Remarks on Swift, said that
+ Stella was "the concealed, but undoubted, wife of Dr. Swift.... If my
+ informations are right, she was married to Dr. Swift in the year 1716, by
+ Dr. Ashe, then Bishop of Clogher." Ten years earlier, in 1742, in a letter
+ to Deane Swift which I have not seen quoted before, Orrery spoke of the
+ advantage of a wife to a man in his declining years; "nor had the Dean
+ felt a blow, or wanted a companion, had he been married, or, in other
+ words, had Stella lived." What this means is not at all clear. In 1754,
+ Dr. Delany, an old friend of Swift's, wrote, in comment upon Orrery's
+ Remarks, "Your account of his marriage is, I am satisfied, true." In 1789,
+ George Monck Berkeley, in his Literary Relics, said that Swift and Stella
+ were married by Dr. Ashe, "who himself related the circumstances to Bishop
+ Berkeley, by whose relict the story was communicated to me." Dr. Ashe
+ cannot have told Bishop Berkeley by word of mouth, because Ashe died in
+ 1717, the year after the supposed marriage, and Berkeley was then still
+ abroad. But Berkeley was at the time tutor to Ashe's son, and may
+ therefore have been informed by letter, though it is difficult to believe
+ that Ashe would write about such a secret so soon after the event. Thomas
+ Sheridan, on information received from his father, Dr. Sheridan, Swift's
+ friend, accepted the story of the marriage in his book (1784), adding
+ particulars which are of very doubtful authenticity; and Johnson, in his
+ Lives of the Poets, says that Dr. Madden told him that Stella had related
+ her "melancholy story" to Dr. Sheridan before her death. On the other
+ hand, Dr. Lyon, Swift's attendant in his later years, disbelieved the
+ story of the marriage, which was, he said, "founded only on hearsay"; and
+ Mrs. Dingley "laughed at it as an idle tale," founded on suspicion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Henry Craik is satisfied with the evidence for the marriage. Mr.
+ Leslie Stephen is of opinion that it is inconclusive, and Forster could
+ find no evidence that is at all reasonably sufficient; while Mr. Stanley
+ Lane-Poole, Mr. Churton Collins, and others are strongly of opinion that
+ no such marriage ever took place. A full discussion of the evidence would
+ involve the consideration of the reliability of the witnesses, and the
+ probability of their having authentic information, and would be out of
+ place here. My own opinion is that the evidence for the marriage is very
+ far from convincing, and this view seems to be confirmed by all that we
+ know from his own letters of Swift's relations with Stella. It has been
+ suggested that she was pained by reports of Swift's intercourse with
+ Vanessa, and felt that his feelings towards herself were growing colder;
+ but this is surmise, and no satisfactory explanation has been given to
+ account for a form of marriage being gone through after so many years of
+ the closest friendship. There is no reason to suppose that there was at
+ the time any gossip in circulation about Stella, and if her reputation was
+ in question, a marriage of which the secret was carefully kept would
+ obviously be of no benefit to her. Moreover, we are told that there was no
+ change in their mode of life; if they were married, what reason could
+ there be for keeping it a secret, or for denying themselves the closer
+ relationship of marriage? The only possible benefit to Stella was that
+ Swift would be prevented marrying anyone else. It is impossible, of
+ course, to disprove a marriage which we are told was secretly performed,
+ without banns or licence or witnesses; but we may reasonably require
+ strong evidence for so startling a step. If we reject the tale, the story
+ of Swift's connection with Stella is at least intelligible; while the
+ acceptance of this marriage introduces many puzzling circumstances, and
+ makes it necessary to believe that during the remainder of Stella's life
+ Swift repeatedly spoke of his wife as a friend, and of himself as one who
+ had never married.(7) What right have we to put aside Swift's plain and
+ repeated statements? Moreover, his attitude towards Vanessa for the
+ remaining years of her life becomes much more culpable if we are to
+ believe that he had given Stella the claim of a wife upon him.(8)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From 1719 onwards we have a series of poems to Stella, written chiefly in
+ celebration of her birthday. She was now thirty-eight (Swift says,
+ "Thirty-four&mdash;we shan't dispute a year or more"), and the verses
+ abound in laughing allusions to her advancing years and wasting form. Hers
+ was "an angel's face a little cracked," but all men would crowd to her
+ door when she was fourscore. His verses to her had always been
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Without one word of Cupid's darts,
+ Of killing eyes, or bleeding hearts;
+ With friendship and esteem possessed,
+ I ne'er admitted Love a guest."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Her only fault was that she could not bear the lightest touch of blame.
+ Her wit and sense, her loving care in illness&mdash;to which he owed that
+ fact that he was alive to say it&mdash;made her the "best pattern of true
+ friends." She replied, in lines written on Swift's birthday in 1721, that
+ she was his pupil and humble friend. He had trained her judgment and
+ refined her fancy and taste:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "You taught how I might youth prolong
+ By knowing what was right and wrong;
+ How from my heart to bring supplies
+ Of lustre to my fading eyes;
+ How soon a beauteous mind repairs
+ The loss of changed or falling hairs;
+ How wit and virtue from within
+ Send out a smoothness o'er the skin
+ Your lectures could my fancy fix,
+ And I can please at thirty-six."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In 1723 Vanessa is said to have written to Stella or to Swift&mdash;there
+ are discrepancies in the versions given by Sheridan and Lord Orrery, both
+ of whom are unreliable&mdash;asking whether the report that they were
+ married was true. Swift, we are told, rode to Celbridge, threw down
+ Vanessa's letter in a great rage, and left without speaking a word.(9)
+ Vanessa, whose health had been failing for some time, died shortly
+ afterwards, having cancelled a will in Swift's favour. She left "Cadenus
+ and Vanessa" for publication, and when someone said that she must have
+ been a remarkable woman to inspire such a poem, Stella replied that it was
+ well known that the Dean could write finely upon a broomstick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon after this tragedy Swift became engrossed in the Irish agitation
+ which led to the publication of the Drapier's Letters, and in 1726 he paid
+ a long-deferred visit to London, taking with him the manuscript of
+ Gulliver's Travels. While in England he was harassed by bad news of
+ Stella, who had been in continued ill-health for some years. His letters
+ to friends in Dublin show how greatly he suffered. To the Rev. John
+ Worrall he wrote, in a letter which he begged him to burn, "What you tell
+ me of Mrs. Johnson I have long expected with great oppression and
+ heaviness of heart. We have been perfect friends these thirty-five years.
+ Upon my advice they both came to Ireland, and have been ever since my
+ constant companions; and the remainder of my life will be a very
+ melancholy scene, when one of them is gone, whom I most esteemed, upon the
+ score of every good quality that can possibly recommend a human creature."
+ He would not for the world be present at her death: "I should be a trouble
+ to her, and a torment to myself." If Stella came to Dublin, he begged that
+ she might be lodged in some airy, healthy part, and not in the Deanery,
+ where too it would be improper for her to die. "There is not a greater
+ folly," he thinks, "than to contract too great and intimate a friendship,
+ which must always leave the survivor miserable." To Dr. Stopford he wrote
+ in similar terms of the "younger of the two" "oldest and dearest friends I
+ have in the world." "This was a person of my own rearing and instructing
+ from childhood, who excelled in every good quality that can possibly
+ accomplish a human creature.... I know not what I am saying; but believe
+ me that violent friendship is much more lasting and as much engaging as
+ violent love." To Dr. Sheridan he said, "I look upon this to be the
+ greatest event that can ever happen to me; but all my preparation will not
+ suffice to make me bear it like a philosopher nor altogether like a
+ Christian. There hath been the most intimate friendship between us from
+ our childhood, and the greatest merit on her side that ever was in one
+ human creature towards another."(10) Pope alludes in a letter to Sheridan
+ to the illness of Swift's "particular friend," but with the exception of
+ another reference by Pope, and of a curiously flippant remark by
+ Bolingbroke, the subject is nowhere mentioned in Swift's correspondence
+ with his literary and fashionable friends in London.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swift crossed to Ireland in August, fearing the worst; but Stella rallied,
+ and in the spring of 1727 he returned to London. In August, however, there
+ came alarming news, when Swift was himself suffering from giddiness and
+ deafness. To Dr. Sheridan he wrote that the last act of life was always a
+ tragedy at best: "it is a bitter aggravation to have one's best friend go
+ before one." Life was indifferent to him; if he recovered from his
+ disorder it would only be to feel the loss of "that person for whose sake
+ only life was worth preserving. I brought both those friends over that we
+ might be happy together as long as God should please; the knot is broken,
+ and the remaining person you know has ill answered the end; and the other,
+ who is now to be lost, is all that was valuable." To Worrall he again
+ wrote (in Latin) that Stella ought not to be lodged at the Deanery; he had
+ enemies who would place a bad interpretation upon it if she died there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swift left London for Dublin in September; he was detained some days at
+ Holyhead by stress of weather, and in the private journal which he kept
+ during that time he speaks of the suspense he was in about his "dearest
+ friend."(11) In December Stella made a will&mdash;signed "Esther Johnson,
+ spinster"&mdash;disposing of her property in the manner Swift had
+ suggested. Her allusions to Swift are incompatible with any such feeling
+ of resentment as is suggested by Sheridan. She died on January 28, 1728.
+ Swift could not bear to be present, but on the night of her death he began
+ to write his very interesting Character of Mrs. Johnson, from which
+ passages have already been quoted. He there calls her "the truest, most
+ virtuous and valuable friend that I, or perhaps any other person, was ever
+ blessed with." Combined with excellent gifts of the mind, "she had a
+ gracefulness, somewhat more than human, in every motion, word, and action.
+ Never was so happy a conjunction of civility, freedom, easiness, and
+ sincerity." Everyone treated her with marked respect, yet everyone was at
+ ease in her society. She preserved her wit, judgment, and vivacity to the
+ last, but often complained of her memory. She chose men rather than women
+ for her companions, "the usual topic of ladies' discourse being such as
+ she had little knowledge of and less relish." "Honour, truth, liberality,
+ good nature, and modesty were the virtues she chiefly possessed, and most
+ valued in her acquaintance." In some Prayers used by Swift during her last
+ sickness, he begged for pity for "the mournful friends of Thy distressed
+ servant, who sink under the weight of her present condition, and the fear
+ of losing the most valuable of our friends." He was too ill to be present
+ at the funeral at St. Patrick's. Afterwards, we are told, a lock of her
+ hair was found in his desk, wrapped in a paper bearing the words, "Only a
+ woman's hair."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swift continued to produce pamphlets manifesting growing misanthropy,
+ though he showed many kindnesses to people who stood in need of help. He
+ seems to have given Mrs. Dingley fifty guineas a year, pretending that it
+ came from a fund for which he was trustee. The mental decay which he had
+ always feared&mdash;"I shall be like that tree," he once said, "I shall
+ die at the top"&mdash;became marked about 1738. Paralysis was followed by
+ aphasia, and after acute pain, followed by a long period of apathy, death
+ relieved him in October 1745. He was buried by Stella's side, in
+ accordance with his wishes. The bulk of his fortune was left to found a
+ hospital for idiots and lunatics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There has been much rather fruitless discussion respecting the reason or
+ reasons why Swift did not marry Stella; for if there was any marriage, it
+ was nothing more than a form. Some have supposed that Swift resolved to
+ remain unmarried because the insanity of an uncle and the fits and
+ giddiness to which he was always subject led him to fear insanity in his
+ own case. Others, looking rather to physical causes, have dwelt upon his
+ coldness of temperament and indisposition to love; upon the repugnance he
+ often showed towards marriage, and the tone of some of the verses on the
+ subject written in his later years. Others, again, have found a cause in
+ his parsimonious habits, in his dread of poverty, the effects of which he
+ had himself felt, and in the smallness of his income, at least until he
+ was middle-aged.(12) It may well be that one or all of these things
+ influenced Swift's action. We cannot say more. He himself, as we have
+ seen, said, as early as 1704, that if his humour and means had permitted
+ him to think of marriage, his choice would have been Stella. Perhaps,
+ however, there is not much mystery in the matter. Swift seems to have been
+ wanting in passion; probably he was satisfied with the affection which
+ Stella gave him, and did not wish for more. Such an attachment as his
+ usually results in marriage, but not necessarily. It is not sufficiently
+ remembered that the affection began in Stella's childhood. They were
+ "perfect friends" for nearly forty years, and her advancing years in no
+ way lessened his love, which was independent of beauty. Whether Stella was
+ satisfied, who shall say? Mrs. Oliphant thought that few women would be
+ disposed to pity Stella, or think her life one of blight or injury. Mr.
+ Leslie Stephen says, "She might and probably did regard his friendship as
+ a full equivalent for the sacrifice.... Is it better to be the most
+ intimate friend of a man of genius or the wife of a commonplace Tisdall?"
+ Whatever we may surmise, there is nothing to prove that she was
+ disappointed. She was the one star which brightened Swift's storm-tossed
+ course; it is well that she was spared seeing the wreck at the end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Journal to Stella is interesting from many points of view: for its
+ bearing upon Swift's relations with Stella and upon his own character; for
+ the light which it throws upon the history of the time and upon prominent
+ men of the day; and for the illustrations it contains of the social life
+ of people of various classes in London and elsewhere. The fact that it was
+ written without any thought of publication is one of its greatest
+ attractions. Swift jotted down his opinions, his hopes, his
+ disappointments, without thought of their being seen by anybody but his
+ correspondents. The letters are transparently natural. It has been said
+ more than once that the Journal, by the nature of the case, contains no
+ full-length portraits, and hardly any sketches. Swift mentions the people
+ he met, but rarely stops to draw a picture of them. But though this is
+ true, the casual remarks which he makes often give a vivid impression of
+ what he thought of the person of whom he is speaking, and in many cases
+ those few words form a chief part of our general estimate of the man.
+ There are but few people of note at the time who are not mentioned in
+ these pages. We see Queen Anne holding a Drawing-room in her bedroom: "she
+ looked at us round with her fan in her mouth, and once a minute said about
+ three words to some that were nearest her." We see Harley, afterwards the
+ Earl of Oxford, "a pure trifler," who was always putting off important
+ business; Bolingbroke, "a thorough rake"; the prudent Lord Dartmouth, the
+ other Secretary of State, from whom Swift could never "work out a dinner."
+ There is Marlborough, "covetous as Hell, and ambitious as the prince of
+ it," yet a great general and unduly pressed by the Tories; and the
+ volatile Earl of Peterborough, "above fifty, and as active as one of
+ five-and-twenty"&mdash;"the ramblingest lying rogue on earth." We meet
+ poor Congreve, nearly blind, and in fear of losing his commissionership;
+ the kindly Arbuthnot, the Queen's physician; Addison, whom Swift met more
+ and more rarely, busy with the preparation and production of Cato; Steele,
+ careless as ever, neglecting important appointments, and "governed by his
+ wife most abominably"; Prior, poet and diplomatist, with a "lean carcass";
+ and young Berkeley of Trinity College, Dublin, "a very ingenious man and
+ great philosopher," whom Swift determined to favour as much as he could.
+ Mrs. Masham, the Duchess of Somerset, the Duchess of Shrewsbury, the
+ Duchess of Hamilton, Lady Betty Germaine, and many other ladies appear
+ with more or less distinctness; besides a host of people of less note, of
+ whom we often know little but what Swift tells us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swift throws much light, too, on the daily life of his time. The bellman
+ on his nightly rounds, calling "Paaast twelvvve o'clock"; the dinner at
+ three, or at the latest, four; the meetings at coffee-houses; the
+ book-sales; the visit to the London sights&mdash;the lions at the Tower,
+ Bedlam, the tombs in Westminster Abbey, and the puppet-show; the terrible
+ Mohocks, of whom Swift stood in so much fear; the polite "howdees" sent to
+ friends by footmen; these and more are all described in the Journal. We
+ read of curious habits and practices of fashionable ladies; of the snuff
+ used by Mrs. Dingley and others; of the jokes&mdash;"bites," puns, and the
+ like&mdash;indulged in by polite persons. When Swift lodged at Chelsea, he
+ reached London either by boat, or by coach,&mdash;which was sometimes full
+ when he wanted it,&mdash;or by walking across the "Five Fields," not
+ without fear of robbers at night. The going to or from Ireland was a
+ serious matter; after the long journey by road came the voyage (weather
+ permitting) of some fifteen hours, with the risk of being seized or
+ pursued by French privateers; and when Ireland was reached the roads were
+ of the worst. We have glimpses of fashionable society in Dublin, of the
+ quiet life at Laracor and Trim, and of the drinking of the waters at
+ Wexford, where visitors had to put up with primitive arrangements: "Mrs.
+ Dingley never saw such a place in her life."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swift's own characteristics come out in the clearest manner in the
+ Journal, which gives all his hopes and fears during three busy years. He
+ was pleased to find on his arrival in London how great a value was set on
+ his friendship by both political parties: "The Whigs were ravished to see
+ me, and would lay hold on me as a twig while they are drowning;" but
+ Godolphin's coldness enraged him, so that he was "almost vowing
+ vengeance." Next day he talked treason heartily against the Whigs, their
+ baseness and ingratitude, and went home full of schemes of revenge. "The
+ Tories drily tell me I may make my fortune, if I please; but I do not
+ understand them, or rather, I DO understand them." He realised that the
+ Tories might not be more grateful than others, but he thought they were
+ pursuing the true interests of the public, and was glad to contribute what
+ was in his power. His vanity was gratified by Harley inviting him to the
+ private dinners with St. John and Harcourt which were given on Saturdays,
+ and by their calling him Jonathan; but he did not hope too much from their
+ friendship: "I said I believed they would leave me Jonathan, as they found
+ me... but I care not."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of Swift's frugal habits there is abundant evidence in the Journal. When
+ he came to town he took rooms on a first floor, "a dining-room and
+ bed-chamber, at eight shillings a week; plaguy dear, but I spend nothing
+ for eating, never go to a tavern, and very seldom in a coach; yet after
+ all it will be expensive." In November he mentions that he had a fire: "I
+ am spending my second half-bushel of coals." In another place he says,
+ "People have so left the town, that I am at a loss for a dinner.... It
+ cost me eighteenpence in coach-hire before I could find a place to dine
+ in." Elsewhere we find: "This paper does not cost me a farthing: I have it
+ from the Secretary's office." He often complains of having to take a coach
+ owing to the dirty condition of the streets: "This rain ruins me in
+ coach-hire; I walked away sixpennyworth, and came within a shilling
+ length, and then took a coach, and got a lift back for nothing."(13)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swift's arrogance&mdash;the arrogance, sometimes, of a man who is morbidly
+ suspicious that he may be patronised&mdash;is shown in the manner in which
+ he speaks of the grand ladies with whom he came in contact. He calls the
+ Duke of Ormond's daughters "insolent drabs," and talks of his "mistress,
+ Ophy Butler's wife, who is grown a little charmless." When the Duchess of
+ Shrewsbury reproached him for not dining with her, Swift said that was not
+ so soon done; he expected more advances from ladies, especially duchesses.
+ On another occasion he was to have supped at Lady Ashburnham's, "but the
+ drab did not call for us in her coach, as she promised, but sent for us,
+ and so I sent my excuses." The arrogance was, however, often only on the
+ surface. It is evident that Swift was very kind in many cases. He felt
+ deeply for Mrs. Long in her misfortunes, living and dying in an obscure
+ country town. On the last illness of the poet Harrison he says, "I am very
+ much afflicted for him, as he is my own creature.... I was afraid to knock
+ at the door; my mind misgave me." He was "heartily sorry for poor Mrs.
+ Parnell's death; she seemed to be an excellent good-natured young woman,
+ and I believe the poor lad is much afflicted; they appeared to live
+ perfectly well together." Afterwards he helped Parnell by introducing him
+ to Bolingbroke and Oxford. He found kind words for Mrs. Manley in her
+ illness, and Lady Ashburnham's death was "extremely moving.... She was my
+ greatest favourite, and I am in excessive concern for her loss." Lastly,
+ he was extraordinarily patient towards his servant Patrick, who drank,
+ stopped out at night, and in many ways tried Swift's temper. There were
+ good points about Patrick, but no doubt the great consideration which
+ Swift showed him was due in part to the fact that he was a favourite of
+ the ladies in Dublin, and had Mrs. Vanhomrigh to intercede for him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But for the best example of the kindly side of Swift's nature, we must
+ turn to what he tells us in the Journal about Stella herself. The "little
+ language" which Swift used when writing to her was the language he
+ employed when playing with Stella as a little child at Moor Park.
+ Thackeray, who was not much in sympathy with Swift, said that he knew of
+ "nothing more manly, more tender, more exquisitely touching, than some of
+ these notes." Swift says that when he wrote plainly, he felt as if they
+ were no longer alone, but "a bad scrawl is so snug it looks like a PMD."
+ In writing his fond and playful prattle, he made up his mouth "just as if
+ he were speaking it."(14)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though Mrs. Dingley is constantly associated with Stella in the
+ affectionate greetings in the Journal, she seems to have been included
+ merely as a cloak to enable him to express the more freely his affection
+ for her companion. Such phrases as "saucy girls," "sirrahs," "sauceboxes,"
+ and the like, are often applied to both; and sometimes Swift certainly
+ writes as if the one were as dear to him as the other; thus we find,
+ "Farewell, my dearest lives and delights, I love you better than ever, if
+ possible, as hope saved, I do, and ever will.... I can count upon nothing,
+ nor will, but upon MD's love and kindness.... And so farewell, dearest MD,
+ Stella, Dingley, Presto, all together, now and for ever, all together."
+ But as a rule, notwithstanding Swift's caution, the greetings intended for
+ Stella alone are easily distinguishable in tone. He often refers to her
+ weak eyes and delicate health. Thus he writes, "The chocolate is a
+ present, madam, for Stella. Don't read this, you little rogue, with your
+ little eyes; but give it to Dingley, pray now; and I will write as plain
+ as the skies." And again, "God Almighty bless poor Stella, and her eyes
+ and head: what shall we do to cure them, poor dear life?" Or, "Now to
+ Stella's little postscript; and I am almost crazed that you vex yourself
+ for not writing. Can't you dictate to Dingley, and not strain your dear
+ little eyes? I am sure 'tis the grief of my soul to think you are out of
+ order." They had been keeping his birthday; Swift wished he had been with
+ them, rather than in London, where he had no manner of pleasure: "I say
+ Amen with all my heart and vitals, that we may never be asunder again ten
+ days together while poor Presto lives." A few days later he says, "I wish
+ I were at Laracor, with dear charming MD," and again, "Farewell, dearest
+ beloved MD, and love poor poor Presto, who has not had one happy day since
+ he left you." "I will say no more, but beg you to be easy till Fortune
+ takes his course, and to believe MD's felicity is the great goal I aim at
+ in all my pursuits." "How does Stella look, Madam Dingley?" he asks;
+ "pretty well, a handsome young woman still? Will she pass in a crowd? Will
+ she make a figure in a country church?" Elsewhere he writes, on receipt of
+ a letter, "God Almighty bless poor dear Stella, and send her a great many
+ birthdays, all happy and healthy and wealthy, and with me ever together,
+ and never asunder again, unless by chance.... I can hardly imagine you
+ absent when I am reading your letter or writing to you. No, faith, you are
+ just here upon this little paper, and therefore I see and talk with you
+ every evening constantly, and sometimes in the morning." The letters lay
+ under Swift's pillow, and he fondled them as if he were caressing Stella's
+ hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of Stella herself we naturally have no direct account in the Journal, but
+ we hear a good deal of her life in Ireland, and can picture what she was.
+ Among her friends in and about Trim and Laracor were Dr. Raymond, the
+ vicar of Trim, and his wife, the Garret Wesleys, the Percevals, and Mr.
+ Warburton, Swift's curate. At Dublin there were Archdeacon Walls and his
+ family; Alderman Stoyte, his wife and sister-in-law; Dean Sterne and the
+ Irish Postmaster-General, Isaac Manley. For years these friends formed a
+ club which met in Dublin at each other's houses, to sup and play cards
+ ("ombre and claret, and toasted oranges"), and we have frequent allusions
+ to Stella's indifferent play, and the money which she lost, much to Mrs.
+ Dingley's chagrin: "Poor Dingley fretted to see Stella lose that four and
+ elevenpence t'other night." Mrs. Dingley herself could hardly play well
+ enough to hold the cards while Stella went into the next room. If at
+ dinner the mutton was underdone, and "poor Stella cannot eat, poor dear
+ rogue," then "Dingley is so vexed." Swift was for ever urging Stella to
+ walk and ride; she was "naturally a stout walker," and "Dingley would do
+ well enough if her petticoats were pinned up." And we see Stella setting
+ out on and returning from her ride, with her riband and mask: "Ah, that
+ riding to Laracor gives me short sighs as well as you," he says; "all the
+ days I have passed here have been dirt to those."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the Journal shows us some of Swift's less attractive qualities, it
+ shows still more how great a store of humour, tenderness, and affection
+ there was in him. In these letters we see his very soul; in his literary
+ work we are seldom moved to anything but admiration of his wit and genius.
+ Such daily outpourings could never have been written for publication, they
+ were meant only for one who understood him perfectly; and everything that
+ we know of Stella&mdash;her kindliness, her wit, her vivacity, her loyalty&mdash;shows
+ that she was worthy of the confidence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ JOURNAL TO STELLA
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 1.(1)
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ CHESTER, Sept. 2, 1710.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Joe(2) will give you an account of me till I got into the boat; after
+ which the rogues made a new bargain, and forced me to give them two
+ crowns, and talked as if we should not be able to overtake any ship: but
+ in half an hour we got to the yacht; for the ships lay by (to) wait for my
+ Lord Lieutenant's steward. We made our voyage in fifteen hours just. Last
+ night I came to this town, and shall leave it, I believe, on Monday. The
+ first man I met in Chester was Dr. Raymond.(3) He and Mrs. Raymond were
+ here about levying a fine, in order to have power to sell their estate.
+ They have found everything answer very well. They both desire to present
+ their humble services to you: they do not think of Ireland till next year.
+ I got a fall off my horse, riding here from Parkgate,(4) but no hurt; the
+ horse understanding falls very well, and lying quietly till I get up. My
+ duty to the Bishop of Clogher.(5) I saw him returning from Dunleary; but
+ he saw not me. I take it ill he was not at Convocation, and that I have
+ not his name to my powers.(6) I beg you will hold your resolution of going
+ to Trim, and riding there as much as you can. Let the Bishop of Clogher
+ remind the Bishop of Killala(7) to send me a letter, with one enclosed to
+ the Bishop of Lichfield.(8) Let all who write to me, enclose to Richard
+ Steele, Esq., at his office at the Cockpit, near Whitehall.(9) But not MD;
+ I will pay for their letters at St. James's Coffee-house,(10) that I may
+ have them the sooner. My Lord Mountjoy(11) is now in the humour that we
+ should begin our journey this afternoon; so that I have stole here again
+ to finish this letter, which must be short or long accordingly. I write
+ this post to Mrs. Wesley,(12) and will tell her, that I have taken care
+ she may have her bill of one hundred and fifteen pounds whenever she
+ pleases to send for it; and in that case I desire you will send it her
+ enclosed and sealed, and have it ready so, in case she should send for it:
+ otherwise keep it. I will say no more till I hear whether I go to-day or
+ no: if I do, the letter is almost at an end. My cozen Abigail is grown
+ prodigiously old. God Almighty bless poo dee richar MD; and, for God's
+ sake, be merry, and get oo health. I am perfectly resolved to return as
+ soon as I have done my commission, whether it succeeds or no. I never went
+ to England with so little desire in my life. If Mrs. Curry(13) makes any
+ difficulty about the lodgings, I will quit them and pay her from July 9
+ last, and Mrs. Brent(14) must write to Parvisol(15) with orders
+ accordingly. The post is come from London, and just going out; so I have
+ only time to pray God to bless poor richr MD FW FW MD MD ME ME ME.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 2.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, Sept. 9, 1710.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Got here last Thursday,(1) after five days' travelling, weary the first,
+ almost dead the second, tolerable the third, and well enough the rest; and
+ am now glad of the fatigue, which has served for exercise; and I am at
+ present well enough. The Whigs were ravished to see me, and would lay hold
+ on me as a twig while they are drowning,(2) and the great men making me
+ their clumsy apologies, etc. But my Lord Treasurer(3) received me with a
+ great deal of coldness, which has enraged me so, I am almost vowing
+ revenge. I have not yet gone half my circle; but I find all my
+ acquaintance just as I left them. I hear my Lady Giffard(4) is much at
+ Court, and Lady Wharton(5) was ridiculing it t'other day; so I have lost a
+ friend there. I have not yet seen her, nor intend it; but I will contrive
+ to see Stella's mother(6) some other way. I writ to the Bishop of Clogher
+ from Chester; and I now write to the Archbishop of Dublin.(7) Everything
+ is turning upside down; every Whig in great office will, to a man, be
+ infallibly put out; and we shall have such a winter as hath not been seen
+ in England. Everybody asks me, how I came to be so long in Ireland, as
+ naturally as if here were my being; but no soul offers to make it so: and
+ I protest I shall return to Dublin, and the Canal at Laracor,(8) with more
+ satisfaction than ever I did in my life. The Tatler(9) expects every day
+ to be turned out of his employment; and the Duke of Ormond,(10) they say,
+ will be Lieutenant of Ireland. I hope you are now peaceably in
+ Presto's(11) lodgings; but I resolve to turn you out by Christmas; in
+ which time I shall either do my business, or find it not to be done. Pray
+ be at Trim by the time this letter comes to you; and ride little Johnson,
+ who must needs be now in good case. I have begun this letter unusually, on
+ the post-night, and have already written to the Archbishop; and cannot
+ lengthen this. Henceforth I will write something every day to MD, and make
+ it a sort of journal; and when it is full, I will send it, whether MD
+ writes or no; and so that will be pretty: and I shall always be in
+ conversation with MD, and MD with Presto. Pray make Parvisol pay you the
+ ten pounds immediately; so I ordered him. They tell me I am grown fatter,
+ and look better; and, on Monday, Jervas(12) is to retouch my picture. I
+ thought I saw Jack Temple(13) and his wife pass by me to-day in their
+ coach; but I took no notice of them. I am glad I have wholly shaken off
+ that family. Tell the Provost,(14) I have obeyed his commands to the Duke
+ of Ormond; or let it alone, if you please. I saw Jemmy Leigh(15) just now
+ at the Coffee-house, who asked after you with great kindness: he talks of
+ going in a fortnight to Ireland. My service to the Dean,(16) and Mrs.
+ Walls, and her Archdeacon.(17) Will Frankland's(18) wife is near bringing
+ to-bed, and I have promised to christen the child. I fancy you had my
+ Chester letter the Tuesday after I writ. I presented Dr. Raymond to Lord
+ Wharton(19) at Chester. Pray let me know when Joe gets his money.(20) It
+ is near ten, and I hate to send by the bellman.(21) MD shall have a longer
+ letter in a week, but I send this only to tell I am safe in London; and so
+ farewell, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 3.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, Sept. 9, 1710.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ After seeing the Duke of Ormond, dining with Dr. Cockburn,(1) passing some
+ part of the afternoon with Sir Matthew Dudley(2) and Will Frankland, the
+ rest at St. James's Coffee-house, I came home, and writ to the Archbishop
+ of Dublin and MD, and am going to bed. I forgot to tell you, that I begged
+ Will Frankland to stand Manley's(3) friend with his father in this shaking
+ season for places. He told me, his father was in danger to be out; that
+ several were now soliciting for Manley's place; that he was accused of
+ opening letters; that Sir Thomas Frankland(4) would sacrifice everything
+ to save himself; and in that, I fear, Manley is undone, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. To-day I dined with Lord Mountjoy at Kensington; saw my mistress, Ophy
+ Butler's(5) wife, who is grown a little charmless. I sat till ten in the
+ evening with Addison and Steele: Steele will certainly lose his
+ Gazetteer's place, all the world detesting his engaging in parties.(6) At
+ ten I went to the Coffee-house, hoping to find Lord Radnor,(7) whom I had
+ not seen. He was there; and for an hour and a half we talked treason
+ heartily against the Whigs, their baseness and ingratitude. And I am come
+ home, rolling resentments in my mind, and framing schemes of revenge: full
+ of which (having written down some hints) I go to bed. I am afraid MD
+ dined at home, because it is Sunday; and there was the little half-pint of
+ wine: for God's sake, be good girls, and all will be well. Ben Tooke(8)
+ was with me this morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. Seven, morning. I am rising to go to Jervas to finish my picture, and
+ 'tis shaving-day, so good-morrow MD; but don't keep me now, for I can't
+ stay; and pray dine with the Dean, but don't lose your money. I long to
+ hear from you, etc.&mdash;Ten at night. I sat four hours this morning to
+ Jervas, who has given my picture quite another turn, and now approves it
+ entirely; but we must have the approbation of the town. If I were rich
+ enough, I would get a copy of it, and bring it over. Mr. Addison and I
+ dined together at his lodgings, and I sat with him part of this evening;
+ and I am now come home to write an hour. Patrick(9) observes, that the
+ rabble here are much more inquisitive in politics than in Ireland. Every
+ day we expect changes, and the Parliament to be dissolved. Lord Wharton
+ expects every day to be out: he is working like a horse for elections;
+ and, in short, I never saw so great a ferment among all sorts of people. I
+ had a miserable letter from Joe last Saturday, telling me Mr. Pratt(10)
+ refuses payment of his money. I have told it Mr. Addison, and will to Lord
+ Wharton; but I fear with no success. However, I will do all I can.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. To-day I presented Mr. Ford(11) to the Duke of Ormond; and paid my
+ first visit to Lord President,(12) with whom I had much discourse; but put
+ him always off when he began to talk of Lord Wharton in relation to me,
+ till he urged it: then I said, he knew I never expected anything from Lord
+ Wharton, and that Lord Wharton knew that I understood it so. He said that
+ he had written twice to Lord Wharton about me, who both times said nothing
+ at all to that part of his letter. I am advised not to meddle in the
+ affair of the First-Fruits, till this hurry is a little over, which still
+ depends, and we are all in the dark. Lord President told me he expects
+ every day to be out, and has done so these two months. I protest, upon my
+ life, I am heartily weary of this town, and wish I had never stirred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. I went this morning to the city, to see Mr. Stratford the Hamburg
+ merchant, my old schoolfellow;(13) but calling at Bull's(14) on Ludgate
+ Hill, he forced me to his house at Hampstead to dinner among a great deal
+ of ill company; among the rest Mr. Hoadley,(15) the Whig clergyman, so
+ famous for acting the contrary part to Sacheverell:(16) but tomorrow I
+ design again to see Stratford. I was glad, however, to be at Hampstead,
+ where I saw Lady Lucy(17) and Moll Stanhope. I hear very unfortunate news
+ of Mrs. Long;(18) she and her comrade(19) have broke up house, and she is
+ broke for good and all, and is gone to the country: I should be extremely
+ sorry if this be true.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. To-day, I saw Patty Rolt,(20) who heard I was in town; and I dined
+ with Stratford at a merchant's in the city, where I drank the first Tokay
+ wine I ever saw; and it is admirable, yet not to the degree I expected.
+ Stratford is worth a plum,(21) and is now lending the Government forty
+ thousand pounds; yet we were educated together at the same school and
+ university.(22) We hear the Chancellor(23) is to be suddenly out, and Sir
+ Simon Harcourt(24) to succeed him: I am come early home, not caring for
+ the Coffee-house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. To-day Mr. Addison, Colonel Freind,(25) and I, went to see the million
+ lottery(26) drawn at Guildhall. The jackanapes of bluecoat boys gave
+ themselves such airs in pulling out the tickets, and showed white hands
+ open to the company, to let us see there was no cheat. We dined at a
+ country-house near Chelsea, where Mr. Addison often retires; and to-night,
+ at the Coffee-house, we hear Sir Simon Harcourt is made Lord Keeper; so
+ that now we expect every moment the Parliament will be dissolved; but I
+ forgot that this letter will not go in three or four days, and that my
+ news will be stale, which I should therefore put in the last paragraph.
+ Shall I send this letter before I hear from MD, or shall I keep it to
+ lengthen? I have not yet seen Stella's mother, because I will not see Lady
+ Giffard; but I will contrive to go there when Lady Giffard is abroad. I
+ forgot to mark my two former letters; but I remember this is Number 3, and
+ I have not yet had Number 1 from MD; but I shall by Monday, which I reckon
+ will be just a fortnight after you had my first. I am resolved to bring
+ over a great deal of china. I loved it mightily to-day.(27) What shall I
+ bring?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. Morning. Sir John Holland,(28) Comptroller of the Household, has sent
+ to desire my acquaintance: I have a mind to refuse him, because he is a
+ Whig, and will, I suppose, be out among the rest; but he is a man of worth
+ and learning. Tell me, do you like this journal way of writing? Is it not
+ tedious and dull?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Night. I dined to-day with a cousin, a printer,(29) where Patty Rolt
+ lodges, and then came home, after a visit or two; and it has been a very
+ insipid day. Mrs. Long's misfortune is confirmed to me; bailiffs were in
+ her house; she retired to private lodgings; thence to the country, nobody
+ knows where: her friends leave letters at some inn, and they are carried
+ to her; and she writes answers without dating them from any place. I
+ swear, it grieves me to the soul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. To-day I dined six miles out of town, with Will Pate,(30) the learned
+ woollen-draper; Mr. Stratford went with me; six miles here is nothing: we
+ left Pate after sunset, and were here before it was dark. This letter
+ shall go on Tuesday, whether I hear from MD or no. My health continues
+ pretty well; pray God Stella may give me a good account of hers! and I
+ hope you are now at Trim, or soon designing it. I was disappointed
+ to-night: the fellow gave me a letter, and I hoped to see little MD's
+ hand; and it was only to invite me to a venison pasty to-day: so I lost my
+ pasty into the bargain. Pox on these declining courtiers! Here is Mr.
+ Brydges,(31) the Paymaster-General, desiring my acquaintance; but I hear
+ the Queen sent Lord Shrewsbury(32) to assure him he may keep his place;
+ and he promises me great assistance in the affair of the First-Fruits.
+ Well, I must turn over this leaf to-night, though the side would hold
+ another line; but pray consider this is a whole sheet; it holds a plaguy
+ deal, and you must be content to be weary; but I'll do so no more. Sir
+ Simon Harcourt is made Attorney-General, and not Lord Keeper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. To-day I dined with Mr. Stratford at Mr. Addison's retirement near
+ Chelsea; then came to town; got home early, and began a letter to the
+ Tatler,(33) about the corruptions of style and writing, etc., and, having
+ not heard from you, am resolved this letter shall go to-night. Lord
+ Wharton was sent for to town in mighty haste, by the Duke of
+ Devonshire:(34) they have some project in hand; but it will not do, for
+ every hour we expect a thorough revolution, and that the Parliament will
+ be dissolved. When you see Joe, tell him Lord Wharton is too busy to mind
+ any of his affairs; but I will get what good offices I can from Mr.
+ Addison, and will write to-day to Mr. Pratt; and bid Joe not to be
+ discouraged, for I am confident he will get the money under any
+ Government; but he must have patience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. I have been scribbling this morning, and I believe shall hardly fill
+ this side to-day, but send it as it is; and it is good enough for naughty
+ girls that won't write to a body, and to a good boy like Presto. I thought
+ to have sent this to-night, but was kept by company, and could not; and,
+ to say the truth, I had a little mind to expect one post more for a letter
+ from MD. Yesterday at noon died the Earl of Anglesea,(35) the great
+ support of the Tories; so that employment of Vice-Treasurer of Ireland is
+ again vacant. We were to have been great friends, and I could hardly have
+ a loss that could grieve me more. The Bishop of Durham(36) died the same
+ day. The Duke of Ormond's daughter(37) was to visit me to-day at a third
+ place by way of advance,(38) and I am to return it to-morrow. I have had a
+ letter from Lady Berkeley, begging me for charity to come to Berkeley
+ Castle, for company to my lord,(39) who has been ill of a dropsy; but I
+ cannot go, and must send my excuse to-morrow. I am told that in a few
+ hours there will be more removals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. To-day I returned my visits to the Duke's daughters;(40) the insolent
+ drabs came up to my very mouth to salute me. Then I heard the report
+ confirmed of removals; my Lord President Somers; the Duke of Devonshire,
+ Lord Steward; and Mr. Boyle,(41) Secretary of State, are all turned out
+ to-day. I never remember such bold steps taken by a Court: I am almost
+ shocked at it, though I did not care if they were all hanged. We are
+ astonished why the Parliament is not yet dissolved, and why they keep a
+ matter of that importance to the last. We shall have a strange winter
+ here, between the struggles of a cunning provoked discarded party, and the
+ triumphs of one in power; of both which I shall be an indifferent
+ spectator, and return very peaceably to Ireland, when I have done my part
+ in the affair I am entrusted with, whether it succeeds or no. To-morrow I
+ change my lodgings in Pall Mall for one in Bury Street,(42) where I
+ suppose I shall continue while I stay in London. If anything happens
+ tomorrow, I will add it.&mdash;Robin's Coffee-house.(43) We have great
+ news just now from Spain; Madrid taken, and Pampeluna. I am here ever
+ interrupted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21. I have just received your letter, which I will not answer now; God be
+ thanked all things are so well. I find you have not yet had my second: I
+ had a letter from Parvisol, who tells me he gave Mrs. Walls a bill of
+ twenty pounds for me, to be given to you; but you have not sent it. This
+ night the Parliament is dissolved: great news from Spain; King Charles and
+ Stanhope are at Madrid, and Count Staremberg has taken Pampeluna.
+ Farewell. This is from St. James's Coffee-house. I will begin my answer to
+ your letter to-night, but not send it this week. Pray tell me whether you
+ like this journal way of writing.&mdash;I don't like your reasons for not
+ going to Trim. Parvisol tells me he can sell your horse. Sell it, with a
+ pox? Pray let him know that he shall sell his soul as soon. What? sell
+ anything that Stella loves, and may sometimes ride? It is hers, and let
+ her do as she pleases: pray let him know this by the first that you know
+ goes to Trim. Let him sell my grey, and be hanged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 4.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, Sept. 21, 1710.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Here must I begin another letter, on a whole sheet, for fear saucy little
+ MD should be angry, and think MUCH that the paper is too LITTLE. I had
+ your letter this night, as told you just and no more in my last; for this
+ must be taken up in answering yours, saucebox. I believe I told you where
+ I dined to-day; and to-morrow I go out of town for two days to dine with
+ the same company on Sunday; Molesworth(1) the Florence Envoy, Stratford,
+ and some others. I heard to-day that a gentlewoman from Lady Giffard's
+ house had been at the Coffee-house to inquire for me. It was Stella's
+ mother, I suppose. I shall send her a penny-post letter(2) to-morrow, and
+ contrive to see her without hazarding seeing Lady Giffard, which I will
+ not do until she begs my pardon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22. I dined to-day at Hampstead with Lady Lucy, etc., and when I got home
+ found a letter from Joe, with one enclosed to Lord Wharton, which I will
+ send to his Excellency, and second it as well as I can; but to talk of
+ getting the Queen's order is a jest. Things are in such a combustion here,
+ that I am advised not to meddle yet in the affair I am upon, which
+ concerns the clergy of a whole kingdom; and does he think anybody will
+ trouble the Queen about Joe? We shall, I hope, get a recommendation from
+ the Lord Lieutenant to the trustees for the linen business, and I hope
+ that will do; and so I will write to him in a few days, and he must have
+ patience. This is an answer to part of your letter as well as his. I lied;
+ it is to-morrow I go to the country, and I won't answer a bit more of your
+ letter yet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23. Here is such a stir and bustle with this little MD of ours; I must be
+ writing every night; I can't go to bed without a word to them; I can't put
+ out my candle till I have bid them good-night: O Lord, O Lord! Well, I
+ dined the first time to-day, with Will Frankland and his fortune: she is
+ not very handsome. Did I not say I would go out of town to-day? I hate
+ lying abroad and clutter; I go tomorrow in Frankland's chariot, and come
+ back at night. Lady Berkeley has invited me to Berkeley Castle, and Lady
+ Betty Germaine(3) to Drayton in Northamptonshire; and I'll go to neither.
+ Let me alone, I must finish my pamphlet. I have sent a long letter to
+ Bickerstaff:(4) let the Bishop of Clogher smoke(5) it if he can. Well,
+ I'll write to the Bishop of Killala; but you might have told him how
+ sudden and unexpected my journey was though. Deuce take Lady S&mdash;-;
+ and if I know D&mdash;-y, he is a rawboned-faced fellow, not handsome, nor
+ visibly so young as you say: she sacrifices two thousand pounds a year,
+ and keeps only six hundred. Well, you have had all my land journey in my
+ second letter, and so much for that. So, you have got into Presto's
+ lodgings; very fine, truly! We have had a fortnight of the most glorious
+ weather on earth, and still continues: I hope you have made the best of
+ it. Ballygall(6) will be a pure(7) good place for air, if Mrs. Ashe makes
+ good her promise. Stella writes like an emperor: I am afraid it hurts your
+ eyes; take care of that pray, pray, Mrs. Stella. Can't you do what you
+ will with your own horse? Pray don't let that puppy Parvisol sell him.
+ Patrick is drunk about three times a week, and I bear it, and he has got
+ the better of me; but one of these days I will positively turn him off to
+ the wide world, when none of you are by to intercede for him.&mdash;Stuff&mdash;how
+ can I get her husband into the Charter-house? get a &mdash;&mdash; into
+ the Charter-house.&mdash;Write constantly! Why, sirrah, don't I write
+ every day, and sometimes twice a day to MD? Now I have answered all your
+ letter, and the rest must be as it can be: send me my bill. Tell Mrs.
+ Brent what I say of the Charter-house. I think this enough for one night;
+ and so farewell till this time to-morrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24. To-day I dined six miles out of town at Will Pate's, with Stratford,
+ Frankland, and the Molesworths,(8) and came home at night, and was weary
+ and lazy. I can say no more now, but good-night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25. I was so lazy to-day that I dined at next door,(9) and have sat at
+ home since six, writing to the Bishop of Clogher, Dean Sterne, and Mr.
+ Manley: the last, because I am in fear for him about his place, and have
+ sent him my opinion, what I and his other friends here think he ought to
+ do. I hope he will take it well. My advice was, to keep as much in favour
+ as possible with Sir Thomas Frankland, his master here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26. Smoke how I widen the margin by lying in bed when I write. My bed lies
+ on the wrong side for me, so that I am forced often to write when I am up.
+ Manley, you must know, has had people putting in for his place already;
+ and has been complained of for opening letters. Remember that last Sunday,
+ September 24, 1710, was as hot as midsummer. This was written in the
+ morning; it is now night, and Presto in bed. Here's a clutter, I have
+ gotten MD's second letter, and I must answer it here. I gave the bill to
+ Tooke, and so&mdash;Well, I dined to-day with Sir John Holland the
+ Comptroller, and sat with him till eight; then came home, and sent my
+ letters, and writ part of a lampoon,(10) which goes on very slow: and now
+ I am writing to saucy MD; no wonder, indeed, good boys must write to
+ naughty girls. I have not seen your mother yet; my penny-post letter, I
+ suppose, miscarried: I will write another. Mr. S&mdash;&mdash; came to see
+ me; and said M&mdash;&mdash; was going to the country next morning with
+ her husband (who I find is a surly brute); so I could only desire my
+ service to her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27. To-day all our company dined at Will Frankland's, with Steele and
+ Addison too. This is the first rainy day since I came to town; I cannot
+ afford to answer your letter yet. Morgan,(11) the puppy, writ me a long
+ letter, to desire I would recommend him for purse-bearer or secretary to
+ the next Lord Chancellor that would come with the next Governor. I will
+ not answer him; but beg you will say these words to his father
+ Raymond,(12) or anybody that will tell him: That Dr. Swift has received
+ his letter; and would be very ready to serve him, but cannot do it in what
+ he desires, because he has no sort of interest in the persons to be
+ applied to. These words you may write, and let Joe, or Mr. Warburton,(13)
+ give them to him: a pox on him! However, it is by these sort of ways that
+ fools get preferment. I must not end yet, because I cannot say good-night
+ without losing a line, and then MD would scold; but now, good-night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28. I have the finest piece of Brazil tobacco for Dingley that ever was
+ born.(14) You talk of Leigh; why, he won't be in Dublin these two months:
+ he goes to the country, then returns to London, to see how the world goes
+ here in Parliament. Good-night, sirrahs; no, no, not night; I writ this in
+ the morning, and looking carelessly I thought it had been of last night. I
+ dined to-day with Mrs. Barton(15) alone at her lodgings; where she told me
+ for certain, that Lady S&mdash;&mdash; was with child when she was last in
+ England, and pretended a tympany, and saw everybody; then disappeared for
+ three weeks, her tympany was gone, and she looked like a ghost, etc. No
+ wonder she married when she was so ill at containing. Connolly(16) is out;
+ and Mr. Roberts in his place, who loses a better here, but was formerly a
+ Commissioner in Ireland. That employment cost Connolly three thousand
+ pounds to Lord Wharton; so he has made one ill bargain in his life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29. I wish MD a merry Michaelmas. I dined with Mr. Addison, and Jervas the
+ painter, at Addison's country place; and then came home, and writ more to
+ my lampoon. I made a Tatler since I came: guess which it is, and whether
+ the Bishop of Clogher smokes it. I saw Mr. Sterne(17) to-day: he will do
+ as you order, and I will give him chocolate for Stella's health. He goes
+ not these three weeks. I wish I could send it some other way. So now to
+ your letter, brave boys. I don't like your way of saving shillings:
+ nothing vexes me but that it does not make Stella a coward in a coach.(18)
+ I don't think any lady's advice about my ear signifies twopence: however I
+ will, in compliance to you, ask Dr. Cockburn. Radcliffe(19) I know not,
+ and Barnard(20) I never see. Walls will certainly be stingier for seven
+ years, upon pretence of his robbery. So Stella puns again; why, 'tis well
+ enough; but I'll not second it, though I could make a dozen: I never
+ thought of a pun since I left Ireland.&mdash;Bishop of Clogher's bill?
+ Why, he paid it to me; do you think I was such a fool to go without it? As
+ for the four shillings, I will give you a bill on Parvisol for it on
+ t'other side of this paper; and pray tear off the two letters I shall
+ write to him and Joe, or let Dingley transcribe and send them; though that
+ to Parvisol, I believe, he must have my hand for. No, no, I'll eat no
+ grapes; I ate about six the other day at Sir John Holland's; but would not
+ give sixpence for a thousand, they are so bad this year. Yes, faith, I
+ hope in God Presto and MD will be together this time twelvemonth. What
+ then? Last year I suppose I was at Laracor; but next I hope to eat my
+ Michaelmas goose at my two little gooses' lodgings. I drink no aile (I
+ suppose you mean ale); but yet good wine every day, of five and six
+ shillings a bottle. O Lord, how much Stella writes! pray don't carry that
+ too far, young women, but be temperate, to hold out. To-morrow I go to Mr.
+ Harley.(21) Why, small hopes from the Duke of Ormond: he loves me very
+ well, I believe, and would, in my turn, give me something to make me easy;
+ and I have good interest among his best friends. But I don't think of
+ anything further than the business I am upon. You see I writ to Manley
+ before I had your letter, and I fear he will be out. Yes, Mrs. Owl,
+ Bligh's corpse(22) came to Chester when I was there; and I told you so in
+ my letter, or forgot it. I lodge in Bury Street, where I removed a week
+ ago. I have the first floor, a dining-room, and bed-chamber, at eight
+ shillings a week; plaguy deep, but I spend nothing for eating, never go to
+ a tavern, and very seldom in a coach; yet after all it will be expensive.
+ Why do you trouble yourself, Mistress Stella, about my instrument? I have
+ the same the Archbishop gave me; and it is as good now the bishops are
+ away. The Dean friendly! the Dean be poxed: a great piece of friendship
+ indeed, what you heard him tell the Bishop of Clogher; I wonder he had the
+ face to talk so: but he lent me money, and that's enough. Faith, I would
+ not send this these four days, only for writing to Joe and Parvisol. Tell
+ the Dean that when the bishops send me any packets, they must not write to
+ me at Mr. Steele's; but direct for Mr. Steele, at his office at the
+ Cockpit, and let the enclosed be directed for me: that mistake cost me
+ eighteenpence the other day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30. I dined with Stratford to-day, but am not to see Mr. Harley till
+ Wednesday: it is late, and I send this before there is occasion for the
+ bell; because I would have Joe have his letter, and Parvisol too; which
+ you must so contrive as not to cost them double postage. I can say no
+ more, but that I am, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 5.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, Sept. 30, 1710.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Han't I brought myself into a fine praemunire,(1) to begin writing letters
+ in whole sheets? and now I dare not leave it off. I cannot tell whether
+ you like these journal letters: I believe they would be dull to me to read
+ them over; but, perhaps, little MD is pleased to know how Presto passes
+ his time in her absence. I always begin my last the same day I ended my
+ former. I told you where I dined to-day at a tavern with Stratford:
+ Lewis,(2) who is a great favourite of Harley's, was to have been with us;
+ but he was hurried to Hampton Court, and sent his excuse; and that next
+ Wednesday he would introduce me to Harley. 'Tis good to see what a
+ lamentable confession the Whigs all make me of my ill usage: but I mind
+ them not. I am already represented to Harley as a discontented person,
+ that was used ill for not being Whig enough; and I hope for good usage
+ from him. The Tories drily tell me, I may make my fortune, if I please;
+ but I do not understand them&mdash;or rather, I do understand them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oct. 1. To-day I dined at Molesworth's, the Florence Envoy; and sat this
+ evening with my friend Darteneuf,(3) whom you have heard me talk of; the
+ greatest punner of this town next myself. Have you smoked the Tatler that
+ I writ?(4) It is much liked here, and I think it a pure(5) one. To-morrow
+ I go with Delaval,(6) the Portugal Envoy, to dine with Lord Halifax near
+ Hampton Court.(7) Your Manley's brother, a Parliament-man here, has gotten
+ an employment;(8) and I am informed uses much interest to preserve his
+ brother: and, to-day, I spoke to the elder Frankland to engage his father
+ (Postmaster here); and I hope he will be safe, although he is cruelly
+ hated by all the Tories of Ireland. I have almost finished my lampoon, and
+ will print it for revenge on a certain great person.(9) It has cost me but
+ three shillings in meat and drink since I came here, as thin as the town
+ is. I laugh to see myself so disengaged in these revolutions. Well, I must
+ leave off, and go write to Sir John Stanley,(10) to desire him to engage
+ Lady Hyde as my mistress to engage Lord Hyde(11) in favour of Mr.
+ Pratt.(12)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. Lord Halifax was at Hampton Court at his lodgings, and I dined with him
+ there with Methuen,(13) and Delaval, and the late Attorney-General.(14) I
+ went to the Drawing-room before dinner (for the Queen was at Hampton
+ Court), and expected to see nobody; but I met acquaintance enough. I
+ walked in the gardens, saw the cartoons of Raphael, and other things; and
+ with great difficulty got from Lord Halifax, who would have kept me
+ to-morrow to show me his house and park, and improvements. We left Hampton
+ Court at sunset, and got here in a chariot and two horses time enough by
+ starlight. That's something charms me mightily about London; that you go
+ dine a dozen miles off in October, stay all day, and return so quickly:
+ you cannot do anything like this in Dublin.(15) I writ a second penny post
+ letter to your mother, and hear nothing of her. Did I tell you that Earl
+ Berkeley died last Sunday was se'nnight, at Berkeley Castle, of a dropsy?
+ Lord Halifax began a health to me to-day; it was the Resurrection of the
+ Whigs, which I refused unless he would add their Reformation too and I
+ told him he was the only Whig in England I loved, or had any good opinion
+ of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. This morning Stella's sister(16) came to me with a letter from her
+ mother, who is at Sheen; but will soon be in town, and will call to see
+ me: she gave me a bottle of palsy water,(17) a small one, and desired I
+ would send it you by the first convenience, as I will; and she promises a
+ quart bottle of the same: your sister looked very well, and seems a good
+ modest sort of girl. I went then to Mr. Lewis, first secretary to Lord
+ Dartmouth,(18) and favourite to Mr. Harley, who is to introduce me
+ to-morrow morning. Lewis had with him one Mr. Dyot,(19) a Justice of
+ Peace, worth twenty thousand pounds, a Commissioner of the Stamp Office,
+ and married to a sister of Sir Philip Meadows,(20) Envoy to the Emperor. I
+ tell you this, because it is odds but this Mr. Dyot will be hanged; for he
+ is discovered to have counterfeited stamped paper, in which he was a
+ Commissioner; and, with his accomplices, has cheated the Queen of a
+ hundred thousand pounds. You will hear of it before this come to you, but
+ may be not so particularly; and it is a very odd accident in such a man.
+ Smoke Presto writing news to MD. I dined to-day with Lord Mountjoy at
+ Kensington, and walked from thence this evening to town like an emperor.
+ Remember that yesterday, October 2, was a cruel hard frost, with ice; and
+ six days ago I was dying with heat. As thin as the town is, I have more
+ dinners than ever; and am asked this month by some people, without being
+ able to come for pre-engagements. Well, but I should write plainer, when I
+ consider Stella cannot read,(21) and Dingley is not so skilful at my ugly
+ hand. I had tonight a letter from Mr. Pratt, who tells me Joe will have
+ his money when there are trustees appointed by the Lord Lieutenant for
+ receiving and disposing the linen fund; and whenever those trustees are
+ appointed, I will solicit whoever is Lord Lieutenant, and am in no fear of
+ succeeding. So pray tell or write him word, and bid him not be cast down;
+ for Ned Southwell(22) and Mr. Addison both think Pratt in the right. Don't
+ lose your money at Manley's to-night, sirrahs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. After I had put out my candle last night, my landlady came into my
+ room, with a servant of Lord Halifax, to desire I would go dine with him
+ at his house near Hampton Court; but I sent him word, I had business of
+ great importance that hindered me, etc. And to-day I was brought privately
+ to Mr. Harley, who received me with the greatest respect and kindness
+ imaginable: he has appointed me an hour on Saturday at four, afternoon,
+ when I will open my business to him; which expression I would not use if I
+ were a woman. I know you smoked it; but I did not till I writ it. I dined
+ to-day at Mr. Delaval's, the Envoy for Portugal, with Nic Rowe(23) the
+ poet, and other friends; and I gave my lampoon to be printed. I have more
+ mischief in my heart; and I think it shall go round with them all, as this
+ hits, and I can find hints. I am certain I answered your 2d letter, and
+ yet I do not find it here. I suppose it was in my 4th: and why N. 2d, 3d;
+ is it not enough to say, as I do, 1, 2, 3? etc. I am going to work at
+ another Tatler:(24) I'll be far enough but I say the same thing over two
+ or three times, just as I do when I am talking to little MD; but what care
+ I? they can read it as easily as I can write it: I think I have brought
+ these lines pretty straight again. I fear it will be long before I finish
+ two sides at this rate. Pray, dear MD, when I occasionally give you any
+ little commission mixed with my letters, don't forget it, as that to
+ Morgan and Joe, etc., for I write just as I can remember, otherwise I
+ would put them all together. I was to visit Mr. Sterne to-day, and give
+ him your commission about handkerchiefs: that of chocolate I will do
+ myself, and send it him when he goes, and you'll pay me when the GIVER'S
+ BREAD,(25) etc. To-night I will read a pamphlet, to amuse myself. God
+ preserve your dear healths!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. This morning Delaval came to see me, and we went together to
+ Kneller's,(26) who was not in town. In the way we met the electors for
+ Parliament-men:(27) and the rabble came about our coach, crying, "A Colt,
+ a Stanhope," etc. We were afraid of a dead cat, or our glasses broken, and
+ so were always of their side. I dined again at Delaval's; and in the
+ evening, at the Coffee-house, heard Sir Andrew Fountaine(28) was come to
+ town. This has been but an insipid sort of day, and I have nothing to
+ remark upon it worth threepence: I hope MD had a better, with the Dean,
+ the Bishop, or Mrs. Walls.(29) Why, the reason you lost four and
+ eightpence last night but one at Manley's was, because you played bad
+ games: I took notice of six that you had ten to one against you: Would any
+ but a mad lady go out twice upon Manilio; Basto, and two small
+ diamonds?(30) Then in that game of spades, you blundered when you had
+ ten-ace; I never saw the like of you: and now you are in a huff because I
+ tell you this. Well, here's two and eightpence halfpenny towards your
+ loss.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. Sir Andrew Fountaine came this morning, and caught me writing in bed. I
+ went into the city with him; and we dined at the Chop-house with Will
+ Pate,(31) the learned woollen-draper: then we sauntered at China-shops(32)
+ and booksellers; went to the tavern, drank two pints of white wine, and
+ never parted till ten: and now I am come home, and must copy out some
+ papers I intend for Mr. Harley, whom I am to see, as I told you, to-morrow
+ afternoon; so that this night I shall say little to MD, but that I
+ heartily wish myself with them, and will come as soon as I either fail, or
+ compass my business. We now hear daily of elections; and, in a list I saw
+ yesterday of about twenty, there are seven or eight more Tories than in
+ the last Parliament; so that I believe they need not fear a majority, with
+ the help of those who will vote as the Court pleases. But I have been told
+ that Mr. Harley himself would not let the Tories be too numerous, for fear
+ they should be insolent, and kick against him; and for that reason they
+ have kept several Whigs in employments, who expected to be turned out
+ every day; as Sir John Holland the Comptroller, and many others. And so
+ get you gone to your cards, and your claret and orange, at the Dean's; and
+ I'll go write.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. I wonder when this letter will be finished: it must go by Tuesday,
+ that's certain; and if I have one from MD before, I will not answer it,
+ that's as certain too. 'Tis now morning, and I did not finish my papers
+ for Mr. Harley last night; for you must understand Presto was sleepy, and
+ made blunders and blots. Very pretty that I must be writing to young women
+ in a morning fresh and fasting, faith. Well, good-morrow to you; and so I
+ go to business, and lay aside this paper till night, sirrahs.&mdash;At
+ night. Jack How(33) told Harley that if there were a lower place in hell
+ than another, it was reserved for his porter, who tells lies so gravely,
+ and with so civil a manner. This porter I have had to deal with, going
+ this evening at four to visit Mr. Harley, by his own appointment. But the
+ fellow told me no lie, though I suspected every word he said. He told me
+ his master was just gone to dinner, with much company, and desired I would
+ come an hour hence: which I did, expecting to hear Mr. Harley was gone
+ out; but they had just done dinner. Mr. Harley came out to me, brought me
+ in, and presented to me his son-in-law Lord Doblane(34) (or some such
+ name) and his own son,(35) and, among others, Will Penn(36) the Quaker: we
+ sat two hours drinking as good wine as you do; and two hours more he and I
+ alone; where he heard me tell my business; entered into it with all
+ kindness; asked for my powers, and read them; and read likewise a
+ memorial(37) I had drawn up, and put it in his pocket to show the Queen;
+ told me the measures he would take; and, in short, said everything I could
+ wish: told me, he must bring Mr. St. John(38) (Secretary of State) and me
+ acquainted; and spoke so many things of personal kindness and esteem for
+ me, that I am inclined half to believe what some friends have told me,
+ that he would do everything to bring me over. He has desired to dine with
+ me (what a comical mistake was that!). I mean he has desired me to dine
+ with him on Tuesday; and after four hours being with him, set me down at
+ St. James's Coffee-house in a hackney-coach. All this is odd and comical,
+ if you consider him and me. He knew my Christian name very well. I could
+ not forbear saying thus much upon this matter, although you will think it
+ tedious. But I'll tell you; you must know, 'tis fatal(39) to me to be a
+ scoundrel and a prince the same day: for, being to see him at four, I
+ could not engage myself to dine at any friend's; so I went to Tooke,(40)
+ to give him a ballad, and dine with him; but he was not at home: so I was
+ forced to go to a blind(41) chop-house, and dine for tenpence upon
+ gill-ale,(42) bad broth, and three chops of mutton; and then go reeking
+ from thence to the First Minister of State. And now I am going in charity
+ to send Steele a Tatler, who is very low of late. I think I am civiller
+ than I used to be; and have not used the expression of "you in Ireland"
+ and "we in England" as I did when I was here before, to your great
+ indignation.&mdash;They may talk of the you know what;(43) but, gad, if it
+ had not been for that, I should never have been able to get the access I
+ have had; and if that helps me to succeed, then that same thing will be
+ serviceable to the Church. But how far we must depend upon new friends, I
+ have learnt by long practice, though I think among great Ministers, they
+ are just as good as old ones. And so I think this important day has made a
+ great hole in this side of the paper; and the fiddle-faddles of tomorrow
+ and Monday will make up the rest; and, besides, I shall see Harley on
+ Tuesday before this letter goes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. I must tell you a great piece of refinement(44) of Harley. He charged
+ me to come to him often: I told him I was loth to trouble him in so much
+ business as he had, and desired I might have leave to come at his levee;
+ which he immediately refused, and said, that was not a place for friends
+ to come to. 'Tis now but morning; and I have got a foolish trick, I must
+ say something to MD when I wake, and wish them a good-morrow; for this is
+ not a shaving-day, Sunday, so I have time enough: but get you gone, you
+ rogues, I must go write: Yes, 'twill vex me to the blood if any of these
+ long letters should miscarry: if they do, I will shrink to half-sheets
+ again; but then what will you do to make up the journal? there will be ten
+ days of Presto's life lost; and that will be a sad thing, faith and troth.&mdash;At
+ night. I was at a loss today for a dinner, unless I would have gone a
+ great way, so I dined with some friends that board hereabout,(45) as a
+ spunger;(46) and this evening Sir Andrew Fountaine would needs have me go
+ to the tavern; where, for two bottles of wine, Portugal and Florence,
+ among three of us, we had sixteen shillings to pay; but if ever he catches
+ me so again, I'll spend as many pounds: and therefore I have it among my
+ extraordinaries but we had a neck of mutton dressed a la Maintenon, that
+ the dog could not eat: and it is now twelve o'clock, and I must go sleep.
+ I hope this letter will go before I have MD's third. Do you believe me?
+ and yet, faith, I long for MD's third too and yet I would have it to say,
+ that I writ five for two. I am not fond at all of St. James's
+ Coffee-house,(47) as I used to be. I hope it will mend in winter; but now
+ they are all out of town at elections, or not come from their country
+ houses. Yesterday I was going with Dr. Garth(48) to dine with Charles
+ Main,(49) near the Tower, who has an employment there: he is of Ireland;
+ the Bishop of Clogher knows him well: an honest, good-natured fellow, a
+ thorough hearty laugher, mightily beloved by the men of wit: his mistress
+ is never above a cook-maid. And so, good-night, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. I dined to-day at Sir John Stanley's; my Lady Stanley(50) is one of my
+ favourites: I have as many here as the Bishop of Killala has in Ireland. I
+ am thinking what scurvy company I shall be to MD when I come back: they
+ know everything of me already: I will tell you no more, or I shall have
+ nothing to say, no story to tell, nor any kind of thing. I was very uneasy
+ last night with ugly, nasty, filthy wine, that turned sour on my stomach.
+ I must go to the tavern: oh, but I told you that before. To-morrow I dine
+ at Harley's, and will finish this letter at my return; but I can write no
+ more now, because of the Archbishop: faith, 'tis true; for I am going now
+ to write to him an account of what I have done in the business with
+ Harley:(51) and, faith, young women, I'll tell you what you must count
+ upon, that I never will write one word on the third side in these long
+ letters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. Poor MD's letter was lying so huddled up among papers, I could not
+ find it: I mean poor Presto's letter. Well, I dined with Mr. Harley
+ to-day, and hope some things will be done; but I must say no more: and
+ this letter must be sent to the post-house, and not by the bellman.(52) I
+ am to dine again there on Sunday next; I hope to some good issue. And so
+ now, soon as ever I can in bed, I must begin my 6th to MD as gravely as if
+ I had not written a word this month: fine doings, faith! Methinks I don't
+ write as I should, because I am not in bed: see the ugly wide lines. God
+ Almighty ever bless you, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Faith, this is a whole treatise; I'll go reckon the lines on the other
+ sides. I've reckoned them.(53)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 6.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, Oct. 10, 1710.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ So, as I told you just now in the letter I sent half an hour ago, I dined
+ with Mr. Harley to-day, who presented me to the Attorney-General, Sir
+ Simon Harcourt, with much compliment on all sides, etc. Harley told me he
+ had shown my memorial to the Queen, and seconded it very heartily; and he
+ desires me to dine with him again on Sunday, when he promises to settle it
+ with Her Majesty, before she names a Governor:(1) and I protest I am in
+ hopes it will be done, all but the forms, by that time; for he loves the
+ Church. This is a popular thing, and he would not have a Governor share in
+ it; and, besides, I am told by all hands, he has a mind to gain me over.
+ But in the letter I writ last post (yesterday) to the Archbishop, I did
+ not tell him a syllable of what Mr. Harley said to me last night, because
+ he charged me to keep it secret; so I would not tell it to you, but that,
+ before this goes, I hope the secret will be over. I am now writing my
+ poetical "Description of a Shower in London," and will send it to the
+ Tatler.(2) This is the last sheet of a whole quire I have written since I
+ came to town. Pray, now it comes into my head, will you, when you go to
+ Mrs. Walls, contrive to know whether Mrs. Wesley(3) be in town, and still
+ at her brother's, and how she is in health, and whether she stays in town.
+ I writ to her from Chester, to know what I should do with her note; and I
+ believe the poor woman is afraid to write to me: so I must go to my
+ business, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. To-day at last I dined with Lord Mountrath,(4) and carried Lord
+ Mountjoy, and Sir Andrew Fountaine with me; and was looking over them at
+ ombre till eleven this evening like a fool: they played running ombre
+ half-crowns; and Sir Andrew Fountaine won eight guineas of Mr. Coote;(5)
+ so I am come home late, and will say but little to MD this night. I have
+ gotten half a bushel of coals, and Patrick, the extravagant whelp, had a
+ fire ready for me; but I picked off the coals before I went to bed. It is
+ a sign London is now an empty place, when it will not furnish me with
+ matter for above five or six lines in a day. Did you smoke in my last how
+ I told you the very day and the place you were playing at ombre? But I
+ interlined and altered a little, after I had received a letter from Mr.
+ Manley, that said you were at it in his house, while he was writing to me;
+ but without his help I guessed within one day. Your town is certainly much
+ more sociable than ours. I have not seen your mother yet, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. I dined to-day with Dr. Garth and Mr. Addison, at the Devil Tavern(6)
+ by Temple Bar, and Garth treated; and 'tis well I dine every day, else I
+ should be longer making out my letters: for we are yet in a very dull
+ state, only inquiring every day after new elections, where the Tories
+ carry it among the new members six to one. Mr. Addison's election(7) has
+ passed easy and undisputed; and I believe if he had a mind to be chosen
+ king, he would hardly be refused. An odd accident has happened at
+ Colchester: one Captain Lavallin,(8) coming from Flanders or Spain, found
+ his wife with child by a clerk of Doctors' Commons, whose trade, you know,
+ it is to prevent fornications: and this clerk was the very same fellow
+ that made the discovery of Dyot's(9) counterfeiting the stamp-paper.
+ Lavallin has been this fortnight hunting after the clerk, to kill him; but
+ the fellow was constantly employed at the Treasury, about the discovery he
+ made: the wife had made a shift to patch up the business, alleging that
+ the clerk had told her her husband was dead and other excuses; but t'other
+ day somebody told Lavallin his wife had intrigues before he married her:
+ upon which he goes down in a rage, shoots his wife through the head, then
+ falls on his sword; and, to make the matter sure, at the same time
+ discharges a pistol through his own head, and died on the spot, his wife
+ surviving him about two hours, but in what circumstances of mind and body
+ is terrible to imagine. I have finished my poem on the "Shower," all but
+ the beginning; and am going on with my Tatler. They have fixed about fifty
+ things on me since I came: I have printed but three.(10) One advantage I
+ get by writing to you daily, or rather you get, is, that I shall remember
+ not to write the same things twice; and yet, I fear, I have done it often
+ already: but I will mind and confine myself to the accidents of the day;
+ and so get you gone to ombre, and be good girls, and save your money, and
+ be rich against Presto comes, and write to me now and then: I am thinking
+ it would be a pretty thing to hear sometimes from saucy MD; but do not
+ hurt your eyes, Stella, I charge you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. O Lord, here is but a trifle of my letter written yet; what shall
+ Presto do for prattle-prattle, to entertain MD? The talk now grows fresher
+ of the Duke of Ormond for Ireland; though Mr. Addison says he hears it
+ will be in commission, and Lord Galway(11) one. These letters of mine are
+ a sort of journal, where matters open by degrees; and, as I tell true or
+ false, you will find by the event whether my intelligence be good; but I
+ do not care twopence whether it be or no.&mdash;At night. To-day I was all
+ about St. Paul's, and up at the top like a fool, with Sir Andrew Fountaine
+ and two more; and spent seven shillings for my dinner like a puppy: this
+ is the second time he has served me so; but I will never do it again,
+ though all mankind should persuade me, unconsidering puppies! There is a
+ young fellow here in town we are all fond of, and about a year or two come
+ from the University, one Harrison,(12) a little pretty fellow, with a
+ great deal of wit, good sense, and good nature; has written some mighty
+ pretty things; that in your 6th Miscellanea,(13) about the Sprig of an
+ Orange, is his: he has nothing to live on but being governor to one of the
+ Duke of Queensberry's(14) sons for forty pounds a year. The fine fellows
+ are always inviting him to the tavern, and make him pay his club.
+ Henley(15) is a great crony of his: they are often at the tavern at six or
+ seven shillings reckoning, and he always makes the poor lad pay his full
+ share. A colonel and a lord were at him and me the same way to-night: I
+ absolutely refused, and made Harrison lag behind, and persuaded him not to
+ go to them. I tell you this, because I find all rich fellows have that
+ humour of using all people without any consideration of their fortunes;
+ but I will see them rot before they shall serve me so. Lord Halifax is
+ always teasing me to go down to his country house, which will cost me a
+ guinea to his servants, and twelve shillings coach-hire; and he shall be
+ hanged first. Is not this a plaguy silly story? But I am vexed at the
+ heart; for I love the young fellow, and am resolved to stir up people to
+ do something for him: he is a Whig, and I will put him upon some of my
+ cast Whigs; for I have done with them; and they have, I hope, done with
+ this kingdom for our time. They were sure of the four members for London
+ above all places, and they have lost three in the four.(16) Sir Richard
+ Onslow,(17) we hear, has lost for Surrey; and they are overthrown in most
+ places. Lookee, gentlewomen, if I write long letters, I must write you
+ news and stuff, unless I send you my verses; and some I dare not; and
+ those on the "Shower in London" I have sent to the Tatler, and you may see
+ them in Ireland. I fancy you will smoke me in the Tatler I am going to
+ write; for I believe I have told you the hint. I had a letter sent me
+ tonight from Sir Matthew Dudley, and found it on my table when I came in.
+ Because it is extraordinary, I will transcribe it from beginning to end.
+ It is as follows: "Is the Devil in you? Oct. 13, 1710." I would have
+ answered every particular passage in it, only I wanted time. Here is
+ enough for to-night, such as it is, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. Is that tobacco at the top of the paper,(18) or what? I do not
+ remember I slobbered. Lord, I dreamt of Stella, etc., so confusedly last
+ night, and that we saw Dean Bolton(19) and Sterne(20) go into a shop: and
+ she bid me call them to her, and they proved to be two parsons I know not;
+ and I walked without till she was shifting, and such stuff, mixed with
+ much melancholy and uneasiness, and things not as they should be, and I
+ know not how: and it is now an ugly gloomy morning.&mdash;At night. Mr.
+ Addison and I dined with Ned Southwell, and walked in the Park; and at the
+ Coffee-house I found a letter from the Bishop of Clogher, and a packet
+ from MD. I opened the Bishop's letter; but put up MD's, and visited a lady
+ just come to town; and am now got into bed, and going to open your little
+ letter: and God send I may find MD well, and happy, and merry, and that
+ they love Presto as they do fires. Oh, I will not open it yet! yes I will!
+ no I will not! I am going; I cannot stay till I turn over.(21) What shall
+ I do? My fingers itch; and now I have it in my left hand; and now I will
+ open it this very moment.&mdash;I have just got it, and am cracking the
+ seal, and cannot imagine what is in it; I fear only some letter from a
+ bishop, and it comes too late; I shall employ nobody's credit but my own.
+ Well, I see though&mdash; Pshaw, 'tis from Sir Andrew Fountaine. What,
+ another! I fancy that's from Mrs. Barton;(22) she told me she would write
+ to me; but she writes a better hand than this: I wish you would inquire;
+ it must be at Dawson's(23) office at the Castle. I fear this is from Patty
+ Rolt, by the scrawl. Well, I will read MD's letter. Ah, no; it is from
+ poor Lady Berkeley, to invite me to Berkeley Castle this winter; and now
+ it grieves my heart: she says, she hopes my lord is in a fair way of
+ recovery;(24) poor lady! Well, now I go to MD's letter: faith, it is all
+ right; I hoped it was wrong. Your letter, N.3, that I have now received,
+ is dated Sept. 26; and Manley's letter, that I had five days ago, was
+ dated Oct. 3, that's a fortnight difference: I doubt it has lain in
+ Steele's office, and he forgot. Well, there's an end of that: he is turned
+ out of his place;(25) and you must desire those who send me packets, to
+ enclose them in a paper directed to Mr. Addison, at St. James's
+ Coffee-house: not common letters, but packets: the Bishop of Clogher may
+ mention it to the Archbishop when he sees him. As for your letter, it
+ makes me mad: slidikins, I have been the best boy in Christendom, and you
+ come with your two eggs a penny.&mdash;Well; but stay, I will look over my
+ book: adad, I think there was a chasm between my N.2 and N.3. Faith, I
+ will not promise to write to you every week; but I will write every night,
+ and when it is full I will send it; that will be once in ten days, and
+ that will be often enough: and if you begin to take up the way of writing
+ to Presto, only because it is Tuesday, a Monday bedad it will grow a task;
+ but write when you have a mind.&mdash;No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no&mdash;Agad,
+ agad, agad, agad, agad, agad; no, poor Stellakins.(26) Slids, I would the
+ horse were in your&mdash;chamber! Have not I ordered Parvisol to obey your
+ directions about him? And han't I said in my former letters that you may
+ pickle him, and boil him, if you will? What do you trouble me about your
+ horses for? Have I anything to do with them?&mdash;Revolutions a hindrance
+ to me in my business? Revolutions to me in my business? If it were not for
+ the revolutions, I could do nothing at all; and now I have all hopes
+ possible, though one is certain of nothing; but to-morrow I am to have an
+ answer, and am promised an effectual one. I suppose I have said enough in
+ this and a former letter how I stand with new people; ten times better
+ than ever I did with the old; forty times more caressed. I am to dine
+ to-morrow at Mr. Harley's; and if he continues as he has begun, no man has
+ been ever better treated by another. What you say about Stella's mother, I
+ have spoken enough to it already. I believe she is not in town; for I have
+ not yet seen her. My lampoon is cried up to the skies; but nobody suspects
+ me for it, except Sir Andrew Fountaine: at least they say nothing of it to
+ me. Did not I tell you of a great man who received me very coldly?(27)
+ That's he; but say nothing; 'twas only a little revenge. I will remember
+ to bring it over. The Bishop of Clogher has smoked my Tatler,(28) about
+ shortening of words, etc. But, God So!(29) etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. I will write plainer if I can remember it; for Stella must not spoil
+ her eyes, and Dingley can't read my hand very well; and I am afraid my
+ letters are too long: then you must suppose one to be two, and read them
+ at twice. I dined to-day with Mr. Harley: Mr. Prior(30) dined with us. He
+ has left my memorial with the Queen, who has consented to give the
+ First-Fruits and Twentieth Parts,(31) and will, we hope, declare it
+ to-morrow in the Cabinet. But I beg you to tell it to no person alive; for
+ so I am ordered, till in public: and I hope to get something of greater
+ value. After dinner came in Lord Peterborow:(32) we renewed our
+ acquaintance, and he grew mightily fond of me. They began to talk of a
+ paper of verses called "Sid Hamet." Mr. Harley repeated part, and then
+ pulled them out, and gave them to a gentleman at the table to read, though
+ they had all read them often. Lord Peterborow would let nobody read them
+ but himself: so he did; and Mr. Harley bobbed(33) me at every line, to
+ take notice of the beauties. Prior rallied Lord Peterborow for author of
+ them; and Lord Peterborow said he knew them to be his; and Prior then
+ turned it upon me, and I on him. I am not guessed at all in town to be the
+ author; yet so it is: but that is a secret only to you.(34) Ten to one
+ whether you see them in Ireland; yet here they run prodigiously. Harley
+ presented me to Lord President of Scotland,(35) and Mr. Benson,(36) Lord
+ of the Treasury. Prior and I came away at nine, and sat at the Smyrna(37)
+ till eleven, receiving acquaintance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. This morning early I went in a chair, and Patrick before it, to Mr.
+ Harley, to give him another copy of my memorial, as he desired; but he was
+ full of business, going to the Queen, and I could not see him; but he
+ desired I would send up the paper, and excused himself upon his hurry. I
+ was a little baulked; but they tell me it is nothing. I shall judge by
+ next visit. I tipped his porter with half a crown; and so I am well there
+ for a time at least. I dined at Stratford's in the City, and had Burgundy
+ and Tokay: came back afoot like a scoundrel: then went with Mr. Addison
+ and supped with Lord Mountjoy, which made me sick all night. I forgot that
+ I bought six pounds of chocolate for Stella, and a little wooden box; and
+ I have a great piece of Brazil tobacco for Dingley,(38) and a bottle of
+ palsy-water(39) for Stella: all which, with the two handkerchiefs that Mr.
+ Sterne has bought, and you must pay him for, will be put in the box,
+ directed to Mrs. Curry's, and sent by Dr. Hawkshaw,(40) whom I have not
+ seen; but Sterne has undertaken it. The chocolate is a present, madam, for
+ Stella. Don't read this, you little rogue, with your little eyes; but give
+ it to Dingley, pray now; and I will write as plain as the skies: and let
+ Dingley write Stella's part, and Stella dictate to her, when she
+ apprehends her eyes, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. This letter should have gone this post, if I had not been taken up
+ with business, and two nights being late out; so it must stay till
+ Thursday. I dined to-day with your Mr. Sterne,(41) by invitation, and
+ drank Irish wine;(42) but, before we parted, there came in the prince of
+ puppies, Colonel Edgworth;(43) so I went away. This day came out the
+ Tatler, made up wholly of my "Shower," and a preface to it. They say it is
+ the best thing I ever writ, and I think so too. I suppose the Bishop of
+ Clogher will show it you. Pray tell me how you like it. Tooke is going on
+ with my Miscellany.(44) I'd give a penny the letter to the Bishop of
+ Killaloe(45) was in it: 'twould do him honour. Could not you contrive to
+ say, you hear they are printing my things together; and that you with the
+ bookseller had that letter among the rest: but don't say anything of it as
+ from me. I forget whether it was good or no; but only having heard it much
+ commended, perhaps it may deserve it. Well, I have to-morrow to finish
+ this letter in, and then I will send it next day. I am so vexed that you
+ should write your third to me, when you had but my second, and I had
+ written five, which now I hope you have all: and so I tell you, you are
+ saucy, little, pretty, dear rogues, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. To-day I dined, by invitation, with Stratford and others, at a young
+ merchant's in the City, with Hermitage and Tokay, and stayed till nine,
+ and am now come home. And that dog Patrick is abroad, and drinking, and I
+ cannot I get my night-gown. I have a mind to turn that puppy away: he has
+ been drunk ten times in three weeks. But I han't time to say more; so
+ good-night, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. I am come home from dining in the city with Mr. Addison, at a
+ merchant's; and just now, at the Coffee-house, we have notice that the
+ Duke of Ormond was this day declared Lord Lieutenant at Hampton Court, in
+ Council. I have not seen Mr. Harley since; but hope the affair is done
+ about First-Fruits. I will see him, if possible, to-morrow morning; but
+ this goes to-night. I have sent a box to Mr. Sterne, to send to you by
+ some friend: I have directed it for Mr. Curry, at his house; so you have
+ warning when it comes, as I hope it will soon. The handkerchiefs will be
+ put in some friend's pocket, not to pay custom. And so here ends my sixth,
+ sent when I had but three of MD's: now I am beforehand, and will keep so;
+ and God Almighty bless dearest MD, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 7.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, Oct. 19, 1710.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Faith, I am undone! this paper is larger than the other, and yet I am
+ condemned to a sheet; but, since it is MD, I did not value though I were
+ condemned to a pair. I told you in my letter to-day where I had been, and
+ how the day passed; and so, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. To-day I went to Mr. Lewis, at the Secretary's office, to know when I
+ might see Mr. Harley; and by and by comes up Mr. Harley himself, and
+ appoints me to dine with him to-morrow. I dined with Mrs. Vanhomrigh,(1)
+ and went to wait on the two Lady Butlers;(2) but the porter answered they
+ were not at home: the meaning was, the youngest, Lady Mary, is to be
+ married to-morrow to Lord Ashburnham,(3) the best match now in England,
+ twelve thousand pounds a year, and abundance of money. Tell me how my
+ "Shower" is liked in Ireland: I never knew anything pass better here. I
+ spent the evening with Wortley Montagu(4) and Mr. Addison, over a bottle
+ of Irish wine. Do they know anything in Ireland of my greatness among the
+ Tories? Everybody reproaches me of it here; but I value them not. Have you
+ heard of the verses about the "Rod of Sid Hamet"? Say nothing of them for
+ your life. Hardly anybody suspects me for them; only they think nobody but
+ Prior or I could write them. But I doubt they have not reached you. There
+ is likewise a ballad full of puns on the Westminster Election,(5) that
+ cost me half an hour: it runs, though it be good for nothing. But this is
+ likewise a secret to all but MD. If you have them not, I will bring them
+ over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21. I got MD's fourth to-day at the Coffee-house. God Almighty bless poor,
+ dear Stella, and her eyes and head! What shall we do to cure them? poor,
+ dear life! Your disorders are a pull-back for your good qualities. Would
+ to Heaven I were this minute shaving your poor, dear head, either here or
+ there! Pray do not write, nor read this letter, nor anything else; and I
+ will write plainer for Dingley to read from henceforward, though my pen is
+ apt to ramble when I think whom I am writing to. I will not answer your
+ letter until I tell you that I dined this day with Mr. Harley, who
+ presented me to the Earl of Stirling,(6) a Scotch lord; and in the evening
+ came in Lord Peterborow. I stayed till nine before Mr. Harley would let me
+ go, or tell me anything of my affair. He says the Queen has now granted
+ the First-Fruits and Twentieth Parts; but he will not give me leave to
+ write to the Archbishop, because the Queen designs to signify it to the
+ Bishops in Ireland in form; and to take notice, that it was done upon a
+ memorial from me; which, Mr. Harley tells me he does to make it look more
+ respectful to me, etc.; and I am to see him on Tuesday. I know not whether
+ I told you that, in my memorial which was given to the Queen, I begged for
+ two thousand pounds a year more, though it was not in my commission; but
+ that, Mr. Harley says, cannot yet be done, and that he and I must talk of
+ it further: however, I have started it, and it may follow in time. Pray
+ say nothing of the First-Fruits being granted, unless I give leave at the
+ bottom of this. I believe never anything was compassed so soon, and purely
+ done by my personal credit with Mr. Harley, who is so excessively
+ obliging, that I know not what to make of it, unless to show the rascals
+ of the other party that they used a man unworthily who had deserved
+ better. The memorial given to the Queen from me speaks with great
+ plainness of Lord Wharton. I believe this business is as important to you
+ as the Convocation disputes from Tisdall.(7) I hope in a month or two all
+ the forms of settling this matter will be over; and then I shall have
+ nothing to do here. I will only add one foolish thing more, because it is
+ just come into my head. When this thing is made known, tell me impartially
+ whether they give any of the merit to me, or no; for I am sure I have so
+ much, that I will never take it upon me.&mdash;Insolent sluts! because I
+ say Dublin, Ireland, therefore you must say London, England: that is
+ Stella's malice.&mdash;Well, for that I will not answer your letter till
+ to-morrow-day, and so and so: I will go write something else, and it will
+ not be much; for 'tis late.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22. I was this morning with Mr. Lewis, the under-secretary to Lord
+ Dartmouth, two hours, talking politics, and contriving to keep Steele in
+ his office of stamped paper: he has lost his place of Gazetteer, three
+ hundred pounds a year, for writing a Tatler,(8) some months ago, against
+ Mr. Harley, who gave it him at first, and raised the salary from sixty to
+ three hundred pounds. This was devilish ungrateful; and Lewis was telling
+ me the particulars: but I had a hint given me, that I might save him in
+ the other employment: and leave was given me to clear matters with Steele.
+ Well, I dined with Sir Matthew Dudley, and in the evening went to sit with
+ Mr. Addison, and offer the matter at distance to him, as the discreeter
+ person; but found party had so possessed him, that he talked as if he
+ suspected me, and would not fall in with anything I said. So I stopped
+ short in my overture, and we parted very drily; and I shall say nothing to
+ Steele, and let them do as they will; but, if things stand as they are, he
+ will certainly lose it, unless I save him; and therefore I will not speak
+ to him, that I may not report to his disadvantage. Is not this vexatious?
+ and is there so much in the proverb of proffered service? When shall I
+ grow wise? I endeavour to act in the most exact points of honour and
+ conscience; and my nearest friends will not understand it so. What must a
+ man expect from his enemies? This would vex me, but it shall not; and so I
+ bid you good-night, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23. I know 'tis neither wit nor diversion to tell you every day where I
+ dine; neither do I write it to fill my letter; but I fancy I shall, some
+ time or other, have the curiosity of seeing some particulars how I passed
+ my life when I was absent from MD this time; and so I tell you now that I
+ dined to-day at Molesworth's, the Florence Envoy, then went to the
+ Coffee-house, where I behaved myself coldly enough to Mr. Addison, and so
+ came home to scribble. We dine together to-morrow and next day by
+ invitation; but I shall alter my behaviour to him, till he begs my pardon,
+ or else we shall grow bare acquaintance. I am weary of friends; and
+ friendships are all monsters, but MD's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24. I forgot to tell you, that last night I went to Mr. Harley's, hoping&mdash;faith,
+ I am blundering, for it was this very night at six; and I hoped he would
+ have told me all things were done and granted: but he was abroad, and came
+ home ill, and was gone to bed, much out of order, unless the porter lied.
+ I dined to-day at Sir Matthew Dudley's, with Mr. Addison, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25. I was to-day to see the Duke of Ormond; and, coming out, met Lord
+ Berkeley of Stratton,(9) who told me that Mrs. Temple,(10) the widow, died
+ last Saturday, which, I suppose, is much to the outward grief and inward
+ joy of the family. I dined to-day with Addison and Steele, and a sister of
+ Mr. Addison, who is married to one Mons. Sartre,(11) a Frenchman,
+ prebendary of Westminster, who has a delicious house and garden; yet I
+ thought it was a sort of monastic life in those cloisters, and I liked
+ Laracor better. Addison's sister is a sort of a wit, very like him. I am
+ not fond of her, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26. I was to-day to see Mr. Congreve,(12) who is almost blind with
+ cataracts growing on his eyes; and his case is, that he must wait two or
+ three years, until the cataracts are riper, and till he is quite blind,
+ and then he must have them couched; and, besides, he is never rid of the
+ gout, yet he looks young and fresh, and is as cheerful as ever. He is
+ younger by three years or more than I; and I am twenty years younger than
+ he. He gave me a pain in the great toe, by mentioning the gout. I find
+ such suspicions frequently, but they go off again. I had a second letter
+ from Mr. Morgan,(13) for which I thank you: I wish you were whipped, for
+ forgetting to send him that answer I desired you in one of my former, that
+ I could do nothing for him of what he desired, having no credit at all,
+ etc. Go, be far enough, you negligent baggages. I have had also a letter
+ from Parvisol, with an account how my livings are set; and that they are
+ fallen, since last year, sixty pounds. A comfortable piece of news! He
+ tells me plainly that he finds you have no mind to part with the horse,
+ because you sent for him at the same time you sent him my letter; so that
+ I know not what must be done. It is a sad thing that Stella must have her
+ own horse, whether Parvisol will or no. So now to answer your letter that
+ I had three or four days ago. I am not now in bed, but am come home by
+ eight; and, it being warm, I write up. I never writ to the Bishop of
+ Killala, which, I suppose, was the reason he had not my letter. I have not
+ time, there is the short of it.&mdash;As fond as the Dean(14) is of my
+ letter, he has not written to me. I would only know whether Dean
+ Bolton(15) paid him the twenty pounds; and for the rest, he may kiss&mdash;And
+ that you may ask him, because I am in pain about it, that Dean Bolton is
+ such a whipster. 'Tis the most obliging thing in the world in Dean Sterne
+ to be so kind to you. I believe he knows it will please me, and makes up,
+ that way, his other usage.(16) No, we have had none of your snow, but a
+ little one morning; yet I think it was great snow for an hour or so, but
+ no longer. I had heard of Will Crowe's(17) death before, but not the
+ foolish circumstance that hastened his end. No, I have taken care that
+ Captain Pratt(18) shall not suffer by Lord Anglesea's death.(19) I will
+ try some contrivance to get a copy of my picture from Jervas. I will make
+ Sir Andrew Fountaine buy one as for himself, and I will pay him again, and
+ take it, that is, provided I have money to spare when I leave this.&mdash;Poor
+ John! is he gone? and Madam Parvisol(20) has been in town! Humm. Why,
+ Tighe(21) and I, when he comes, shall not take any notice of each other; I
+ would not do it much in this town, though we had not fallen out.&mdash;I
+ was to-day at Mr. Sterne's lodging: he was not within; and Mr. Leigh is
+ not come to town; but I will do Dingley's errand when I see him. What do I
+ know whether china be dear or no? I once took a fancy of resolving to grow
+ mad for it, but now it is off; I suppose I told you in some former letter.
+ And so you only want some salad-dishes, and plates, and etc. Yes, yes, you
+ shall. I suppose you have named as much as will cost five pounds.&mdash;Now
+ to Stella's little postscript; and I am almost crazed that you vex
+ yourself for not writing. Cannot you dictate to Dingley, and not strain
+ your little, dear eyes? I am sure it is the grief of my soul to think you
+ are out of order. Pray be quiet; and, if you will write, shut your eyes,
+ and write just a line, and no more, thus, "How do you do, Mrs. Stella?"
+ That was written with my eyes shut. Faith, I think it is better than when
+ they are open: and then Dingley may stand by, and tell you when you go too
+ high or too low.&mdash;My letters of business, with packets, if there be
+ any more occasion for such, must be enclosed to Mr. Addison, at St.
+ James's Coffee-house: but I hope to hear, as soon as I see Mr. Harley,
+ that the main difficulties are over, and that the rest will be but form.&mdash;Take
+ two or three nutgalls, take two or three&mdash;&mdash;galls, stop your
+ receipt in your&mdash;I have no need on't. Here is a clutter! Well, so
+ much for your letter, which I will now put up in my letter-partition in my
+ cabinet, as I always do every letter as soon as I answer it. Method is
+ good in all things. Order governs the world. The Devil is the author of
+ confusion. A general of an army, a minister of state; to descend lower, a
+ gardener, a weaver, etc. That may make a fine observation, if you think it
+ worth finishing; but I have not time. Is not this a terrible long piece
+ for one evening? I dined to-day with Patty Rolt at my cousin Leach's,(22)
+ with a pox, in the City: he is a printer, and prints the Postman, oh hoo,
+ and is my cousin, God knows how, and he married Mrs. Baby Aires of
+ Leicester; and my cousin Thomson was with us: and my cousin Leach offers
+ to bring me acquainted with the author of the Postman;(23) and says he
+ does not doubt but the gentleman will be glad of my acquaintance; and that
+ he is a very ingenious man, and a great scholar, and has been beyond sea.
+ But I was modest and said, may be the gentleman was shy, and not fond of
+ new acquaintance; and so put it off: and I wish you could hear me
+ repeating all I have said of this in its proper tone, just as I am writing
+ it. It is all with the same cadence with "Oh hoo," or as when little girls
+ say, "I have got an apple, miss, and I won't give you some." It is plaguy
+ twelvepenny weather this last week, and has cost me ten shillings in coach
+ and chair hire. If the fellow that has your money will pay it, let me beg
+ you to buy Bank Stock with it, which is fallen near thirty per cent. and
+ pays eight pounds per cent. and you have the principal when you please: it
+ will certainly soon rise. I would to God Lady Giffard would put in the
+ four hundred pounds she owes you,(24) and take the five per cent. common
+ interest, and give you the remainder. I will speak to your mother about it
+ when I see her. I am resolved to buy three hundred pounds of it for
+ myself, and take up what I have in Ireland; and I have a contrivance for
+ it, that I hope will do, by making a friend of mine buy it as for himself,
+ and I will pay him when I can get in my money. I hope Stratford will do me
+ that kindness. I'll ask him tomorrow or next day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27. Mr. Rowe(25) the poet desired me to dine with him to-day. I went to
+ his office (he is under-secretary in Mr. Addison's place that he had in
+ England), and there was Mr. Prior; and they both fell commending my
+ "Shower" beyond anything that has been written of the kind: there never
+ was such a "Shower" since Danae's, etc. You must tell me how it is liked
+ among you. I dined with Rowe; Prior could not come: and after dinner we
+ went to a blind tavern,(26) where Congreve, Sir Richard Temple,(27)
+ Estcourt,(28) and Charles Main,(29) were over a bowl of bad punch. The
+ knight sent for six flasks of his own wine for me, and we stayed till
+ twelve. But now my head continues pretty well; I have left off my
+ drinking, and only take a spoonful mixed with water, for fear of the gout,
+ or some ugly distemper; and now, because it is late, I will, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28. Garth and Addison and I dined to-day at a hedge(30) tavern; then I
+ went to Mr. Harley, but he was denied, or not at home: so I fear I shall
+ not hear my business is done before this goes. Then I visited Lord
+ Pembroke,(31) who is just come to town; and we were very merry talking of
+ old things; and I hit him with one pun. Then I went to see the Ladies
+ Butler, and the son of a whore of a porter denied them: so I sent them a
+ threatening message by another lady, for not excepting me always to the
+ porter. I was weary of the Coffee-house, and Ford(32) desired me to sit
+ with him at next door; which I did, like a fool, chatting till twelve, and
+ now am got into bed. I am afraid the new Ministry is at a terrible loss
+ about money: the Whigs talk so, it would give one the spleen; and I am
+ afraid of meeting Mr. Harley out of humour. They think he will never carry
+ through this undertaking. God knows what will come of it. I should be
+ terribly vexed to see things come round again: it will ruin the Church and
+ clergy for ever; but I hope for better. I will send this on Tuesday,
+ whether I hear any further news of my affair or not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29. Mr. Addison and I dined to-day with Lord Mountjoy; which is all the
+ adventures of this day.&mdash;I chatted a while to-night in the
+ Coffee-house, this being a full night; and now am come home, to write some
+ business.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30. I dined to-day at Mrs. Vanhomrigh's, and sent a letter to poor Mrs.
+ Long,(33) who writes to us, but is God knows where, and will not tell
+ anybody the place of her residence. I came home early, and must go write.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 31. The month ends with a fine day; and I have been walking, and visiting
+ Lewis, and concerting where to see Mr. Harley. I have no news to send you.
+ Aire,(34) they say, is taken, though the Whitehall letters this morning
+ say quite the contrary: 'tis good, if it be true. I dined with Mr. Addison
+ and Dick Stewart, Lord Mountjoy's brother;(35) a treat of Addison's. They
+ were half-fuddled, but not I; for I mixed water with my wine, and left
+ them together between nine and ten; and I must send this by the bellman,
+ which vexes me, but I will put it off no longer. Pray God it does not
+ miscarry. I seldom do so; but I can put off little MD no longer. Pray give
+ the under note to Mrs. Brent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am a pretty gentleman; and you lose all your money at cards, sirrah
+ Stella. I found you out; I did so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am staying before I can fold up this letter, till that ugly D is dry in
+ the last line but one. Do not you see it? O Lord, I am loth to leave you,
+ faith&mdash;but it must be so, till the next time. Pox take that D; I will
+ blot it, to dry it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 8.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, Oct. 31, 1710.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ So, now I have sent my seventh to your fourth, young women; and now I will
+ tell you what I would not in my last, that this morning, sitting in my
+ bed, I had a fit of giddiness: the room turned round for about a minute,
+ and then it went off, leaving me sickish, but not very: and so I passed
+ the day as I told you; but I would not end a letter with telling you this,
+ because it might vex you: and I hope in God I shall have no more of it. I
+ saw Dr. Cockburn(1) to-day, and he promises to send me the pills that did
+ me good last year; and likewise has promised me an oil for my ear, that he
+ has been making for that ailment for somebody else.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nov. 1. I wish MD a merry new year. You know this is the first day of it
+ with us.(2) I had no giddiness to-day; but I drank brandy, and have bought
+ a pint for two shillings. I sat up the night before my giddiness pretty
+ late, and writ very much; so I will impute it to that. But I never eat
+ fruit, nor drink ale; but drink better wine than you do, as I did to-day
+ with Mr. Addison at Lord Mountjoy's: then went at five to see Mr. Harley,
+ who could not see me for much company; but sent me his excuse, and desired
+ I would dine with him on Friday; and then I expect some answer to this
+ business, which must either be soon done, or begun again; and then the
+ Duke of Ormond and his people will interfere for their honour, and do
+ nothing. I came home at six, and spent my time in my chamber, without
+ going to the Coffee-house, which I grow weary of; and I studied at
+ leisure, writ not above forty lines, some inventions of my own, and some
+ hints, and read not at all, and this because I would take care of Presto,
+ for fear little MD should be angry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. I took my four pills last night, and they lay an hour in my throat, and
+ so they will do to-night. I suppose I could swallow four affronts as
+ easily. I dined with Dr. Cockburn to-day, and came home at seven; but Mr.
+ Ford has been with me till just now, and it is near eleven. I have had no
+ giddiness to-day. Mr. Dopping(3) I have seen; and he tells me coldly, my
+ "Shower" is liked well enough; there's your Irish judgment! I writ this
+ post to the Bishop of Clogher. It is now just a fortnight since I heard
+ from you. I must have you write once a fortnight, and then I will allow
+ for wind and weather. How goes ombre? Does Mrs. Walls(4) win constantly,
+ as she used to do? And Mrs. Stoyte;(5) I have not thought of her this long
+ time: how does she? I find we have a cargo of Irish coming for London: I
+ am sorry for it; but I never go near them. And Tighe is landed; but Mrs.
+ Wesley,(6) they say, is going home to her husband, like a fool. Well,
+ little monkeys mine, I must go write; and so goodnight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. I ought to read these letters I write, after I have done; for, looking
+ over thus much, I found two or three literal mistakes, which should not be
+ when the hand is so bad. But I hope it does not puzzle little Dingley to
+ read, for I think I mend: but methinks, when I write plain, I do not know
+ how, but we are not alone, all the world can see us. A bad scrawl is so
+ snug, it looks like a PMD.(7) We have scurvy Tatlers of late: so pray do
+ not suspect me. I have one or two hints I design to send him, and never
+ any more: he does not deserve it. He is governed by his wife most
+ abominably,(8) as bad as &mdash;&mdash;. I never saw her since I came; nor
+ has he ever made me an invitation: either he dares not, or is such a
+ thoughtless Tisdall(9) fellow, that he never minds(10) it. So what care I
+ for his wit? for he is the worst company in the world, till he has a
+ bottle of wine in his head. I cannot write straighter in bed, so you must
+ be content.&mdash;At night in bed. Stay, let me see where's this letter to
+ MD among these papers? Oh! here. Well, I will go on now; but I am very
+ busy (smoke the new pen.) I dined with Mr. Harley to-day, and am invited
+ there again on Sunday. I have now leave to write to the Primate and
+ Archbishop of Dublin, that the Queen has granted the First-Fruits; but
+ they are to take no notice of it, till a letter is sent them by the
+ Queen's orders from Lord Dartmouth, Secretary of State, to signify it. The
+ bishops are to be made a corporation, to dispose of the revenue, etc.; and
+ I shall write to the Archbishop of Dublin to-morrow (I have had no
+ giddiness to-day). I know not whether they will have any occasion for me
+ longer to be here; nor can I judge till I see what letter the Queen sends
+ to the bishops, and what they will do upon it. If despatch be used, it may
+ be done in six weeks; but I cannot judge. They sent me to-day a new
+ Commission, signed by the Primate and Archbishop of Dublin,(11) and
+ promise me letters to the two archbishops here; but mine a &mdash;&mdash;
+ for it all. The thing is done, and has been so these ten days; though I
+ had only leave to tell it to-day. I had this day likewise a letter from
+ the Bishop of Clogher, who complains of my not writing; and, what vexes
+ me, says he knows you have long letters from me every week. Why do you
+ tell him so? 'Tis not right, faith: but I won't be angry with MD at
+ distance. I writ to him last post, before I had his; and will write again
+ soon, since I see he expects it, and that Lord and Lady Mountjoy(12) put
+ him off upon me, to give themselves ease. Lastly, I had this day a letter
+ from a certain naughty rogue called MD, and it was N. 5; which I shall not
+ answer to-night, I thank you. No, faith, I have other fish to fry; but
+ to-morrow or next day will be time enough. I have put MD's commissions in
+ a memorandum paper. I think I have done all before, and remember nothing
+ but this to-day about glasses and spectacles and spectacle cases. I have
+ no commission from Stella, but the chocolate and handkerchiefs; and those
+ are bought, and I expect they will be soon sent. I have been with, and
+ sent to, Mr. Sterne, two or three times to know; but he was not within.
+ Odds my life, what am I doing? I must go write and do business.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. I dined to-day at Kensington, with Addison, Steele, etc., came home,
+ and writ a short letter to the Archbishop of Dublin, to let him know the
+ Queen has granted the thing, etc. I writ in the Coffee-house, for I stayed
+ at Kensington till nine, and am plaguy weary; for Colonel Proud(13) was
+ very ill company, and I will never be of a party with him again; and I
+ drank punch, and that and ill company has made me hot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. I was with Mr. Harley from dinner to seven this night, and went to the
+ Coffee-house, where Dr. Davenant(14) would fain have had me gone and drink
+ a bottle of wine at his house hard by, with Dr. Chamberlen,(15) but the
+ puppy used so many words, that I was afraid of his company; and though we
+ promised to come at eight, I sent a messenger to him, that Chamberlen was
+ going to a patient, and therefore we would put it off till another time:
+ so he, and the Comptroller,(16) and I, were prevailed on by Sir Matthew
+ Dudley to go to his house, where I stayed till twelve, and left them.
+ Davenant has been teasing me to look over some of his writings that he is
+ going to publish; but the rogue is so fond of his own productions, that I
+ hear he will not part with a syllable; and he has lately put out a foolish
+ pamphlet, called The Third Part of Tom Double; to make his court to the
+ Tories, whom he had left.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. I was to-day gambling(17) in the City to see Patty Rolt, who is going
+ to Kingston, where she lodges; but, to say the truth, I had a mind for a
+ walk to exercise myself, and happened to be disengaged: for dinners are
+ ten times more plentiful with me here than ever, or than in Dublin. I
+ won't answer your letter yet, because I am busy. I hope to send this
+ before I have another from MD: it would be a sad thing to answer two
+ letters together, as MD does from Presto. But when the two sides are full,
+ away the letter shall go, that is certain, like it or not like it; and
+ that will be about three days hence, for the answering-night will be a
+ long one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. I dined to-day at Sir Richard Temple's, with Congreve, Vanbrugh,
+ Lieutenant-General Farrington,(18) etc. Vanbrugh, I believe I told you,
+ had a long quarrel with me about those verses on his house;(19) but we
+ were very civil and cold. Lady Marlborough used to tease him with them,
+ which had made him angry, though he be a good-natured fellow. It was a
+ Thanksgiving-day,(20) and I was at Court, where the Queen passed us by
+ with all Tories about her; not one Whig: Buckingham,(21) Rochester,(22)
+ Leeds,(23) Shrewsbury, Berkeley of Stratton, Lord Keeper Harcourt, Mr.
+ Harley, Lord Pembroke, etc.; and I have seen her without one Tory. The
+ Queen made me a curtsey, and said, in a sort of familiar way to Presto,
+ "How does MD?" I considered she was a Queen, and so excused her.(24) I do
+ not miss the Whigs at Court; but have as many acquaintance there as
+ formerly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. Here's ado and a clutter! I must now answer MD's fifth; but first you
+ must know I dined at the Portugal Envoy's(25) to-day, with Addison,
+ Vanbrugh, Admiral Wager,(26) Sir Richard Temple,(27) Methuen,(28) etc. I
+ was weary of their company, and stole away at five, and came home like a
+ good boy, and studied till ten, and had a fire, O ho! and now am in bed. I
+ have no fireplace in my bed-chamber; but 'tis very warm weather when one's
+ in bed. Your fine cap,(29) Madam Dingley, is too little, and too hot: I
+ will have that fur taken off; I wish it were far enough; and my old velvet
+ cap is good for nothing. Is it velvet under the fur? I was feeling, but
+ cannot find: if it be, 'twill do without it else I will face it; but then
+ I must buy new velvet: but may be I may beg a piece. What shall I do?
+ Well, now to rogue MD's letter. God be thanked for Stella's eyes mending;
+ and God send it holds; but faith you writ too much at a time: better write
+ less, or write it at ten times. Yes, faith, a long letter in a morning
+ from a dear friend is a dear thing. I smoke a compliment, little
+ mischievous girls, I do so. But who are those WIGGS that think I am turned
+ Tory? Do you mean Whigs? Which WIGGS and WAT do you mean? I know nothing
+ of Raymond, and only had one letter from him a little after I came
+ here.(Pray remember Morgan.) Raymond is indeed like to have much influence
+ over me in London, and to share much of my conversation. I shall, no
+ doubt, introduce him to Harley, and Lord Keeper, and the Secretary of
+ State. The Tatler upon Ithuriel's spear(30) is not mine, madam. What a
+ puzzle there is betwixt you and your judgment! In general you may be
+ sometimes sure of things, as that about STYLE,(31) because it is what I
+ have frequently spoken of; but guessing is mine a&mdash;&mdash;, and I
+ defy mankind, if I please. Why, I writ a pamphlet when I was last in
+ London, that you and a thousand have seen, and never guessed it to be
+ mine. Could you have guessed the "Shower in Town" to be mine? How chance
+ you did not see that before your last letter went? but I suppose you in
+ Ireland did not think it worth mentioning. Nor am I suspected for the
+ lampoon; only Harley said he smoked me; (have I told you so before?) and
+ some others knew it. 'Tis called "The Rod of Sid Hamet." And I have
+ written several other things that I hear commended, and nobody suspects me
+ for them; nor you shall not know till I see you again. What do you mean,
+ "That boards near me, that I dine with now and then?" I know no such
+ person: I do not dine with boarders. What the pox! You know whom I have
+ dined with every day since I left you, better than I do. What do you mean,
+ sirrah? Slids, my ailment has been over these two months almost.
+ Impudence, if you vex me, I will give ten shillings a week for my lodging;
+ for I am almost st&mdash;k out of this with the sink, and it helps me to
+ verses in my "Shower."(32) Well, Madam Dingley, what say you to the world
+ to come? What ballad? Why go look, it was not good for much: have patience
+ till I come back: patience is a gay thing as, etc. I hear nothing of Lord
+ Mountjoy's coming for Ireland. When is Stella's birthday? in March? Lord
+ bless me, my turn at Christ Church;(33) it is so natural to hear you write
+ about that, I believe you have done it a hundred times; it is as fresh in
+ my mind, the verger coming to you; and why to you? Would he have you
+ preach for me? O, pox on your spelling of Latin, Johnsonibus atque, that
+ is the way. How did the Dean get that name by the end? 'Twas you betrayed
+ me: not I, faith; I'll not break his head. Your mother is still in the
+ country, I suppose; for she promised to see me when she came to town. I
+ writ to her four days ago, to desire her to break it to Lady Giffard, to
+ put some money for you in the Bank, which was then fallen thirty per cent.
+ Would to God mine had been here, I should have gained one hundred pounds,
+ and got as good interest as in Ireland, and much securer. I would fain
+ have borrowed three hundred pounds; but money is so scarce here, there is
+ no borrowing, by this fall of stocks. 'Tis rising now, and I knew it
+ would: it fell from one hundred and twenty-nine to ninety-six. I have not
+ heard since from your mother. Do you think I would be so unkind not to see
+ her, that you desire me in a style so melancholy? Mrs. Raymond,(34) you
+ say, is with child: I am sorry for it; and so is, I believe, her husband.
+ Mr. Harley speaks all the kind things to me in the world; and, I believe,
+ would serve me, if I were to stay here; but I reckon in time the Duke of
+ Ormond may give me some addition to Laracor. Why should the Whigs think I
+ came to England to leave them? Sure my journey was no secret. I protest
+ sincerely, I did all I could to hinder it, as the Dean can tell you,
+ although now I do not repent it. But who the Devil cares what they think?
+ Am I under obligations in the least to any of them all? Rot 'em, for
+ ungrateful dogs; I will make them repent their usage before I leave this
+ place. They say here the same thing of my leaving the Whigs; but they own
+ they cannot blame me, considering the treatment I have had. I will take
+ care of your spectacles, as I told you before, and of the Bishop of
+ Killala's; but I will not write to him, I have not time. What do you mean
+ by my fourth, Madam Dinglibus? Does not Stella say you have had my fifth,
+ Goody Blunder? You frighted me till I looked back. Well, this is enough
+ for one night. Pray give my humble service to Mrs. Stoyte and her sister,
+ Kate is it, or Sarah?(35) I have forgot her name, faith. I think I will
+ even (and to Mrs. Walls and the Archdeacon) send this to-morrow: no,
+ faith, that will be in ten days from the last. I will keep it till
+ Saturday, though I write no more. But what if a letter from MD should come
+ in the meantime? Why then I would only say, "Madam, I have received your
+ sixth letter; your most humble servant to command, Presto"; and so
+ conclude. Well, now I will write and think a little, and so to bed, and
+ dream of MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. I have my mouth full of water, and was going to spit it out, because I
+ reasoned with myself, how could I write when my mouth was full? Han't you
+ done things like that, reasoned wrong at first thinking? Well, I was to
+ see Mr. Lewis this morning, and am to dine a few days hence, as he tells
+ me, with Mr. Secretary St. John; and I must contrive to see Harley soon
+ again, to hasten this business from the Queen. I dined to-day at Lord
+ Mountrath's,(36) with Lord Mountjoy,(37) etc.; but the wine was not good,
+ so I came away, stayed at the Coffee-house till seven, then came home to
+ my fire, the maidenhead of my second half-bushel, and am now in bed at
+ eleven, as usual. 'Tis mighty warm; yet I fear I should catch cold this
+ wet weather, if I sat an evening in my room after coming from warm places:
+ and I must make much of myself, because MD is not here to take care of
+ Presto; and I am full of business, writing, etc., and do not care for the
+ Coffee-house; and so this serves for all together, not to tell it you over
+ and over, as silly people do; but Presto is a wiser man, faith, than so,
+ let me tell you, gentlewomen. See, I am got to the third side; but, faith,
+ I will not do that often; but I must say something early to-day, till the
+ letter is done, and on Saturday it shall go; so I must leave something
+ till to-morrow, till to-morrow and next day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. O Lord, I would this letter was with you with all my heart! If it
+ should miscarry, what a deal would be lost! I forgot to leave a gap in the
+ last line but one for the seal, like a puppy; but I should have allowed
+ for night, goodnight; but when I am taking leave, I cannot leave a bit,
+ faith; but I fancy the seal will not come there. I dined to-day at Lady
+ Lucy's, where they ran down my "Shower"; and said, "Sid Hamet" was the
+ silliest poem they ever read; and told Prior so, whom they thought to be
+ author of it. Don't you wonder I never dined there before? But I am too
+ busy, and they live too far off; and, besides, I do not like women so much
+ as I did. (MD, you must know, are not women.) I supped to-night at
+ Addison's, with Garth, Steele, and Mr. Dopping; and am come home late.
+ Lewis has sent to me to desire I will dine with some company I shall like.
+ I suppose it is Mr. Secretary St. John's appointment. I had a letter just
+ now from Raymond, who is at Bristol, and says he will be at London in a
+ fortnight, and leave his wife behind him; and desires any lodging in the
+ house where I am: but that must not be. I shall not know what to do with
+ him in town: to be sure, I will not present him to any acquaintance of
+ mine; and he will live a delicate life, a parson and a perfect stranger!
+ Paaast twelvvve o'clock,(38) and so good-night, etc. Oh! but I forgot,
+ Jemmy Leigh is come to town; says he has brought Dingley's things, and
+ will send them with the first convenience. My parcel, I hear, is not sent
+ yet. He thinks of going for Ireland in a month, etc. I cannot write
+ tomorrow, because&mdash;what, because of the Archbishop; because I will
+ seal my letter early; because I am engaged from noon till night; because
+ of many kind of things; and yet I will write one or two words to-morrow
+ morning, to keep up my journal constant, and at night I will begin my
+ ninth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. Morning by candlelight. You must know that I am in my nightgown every
+ morning between six and seven, and Patrick is forced to ply me fifty times
+ before I can get on my nightgown; and so now I will take my leave of my
+ own dear MD for this letter, and begin my next when I come home at night.
+ God Almighty bless and protect dearest MD. Farewell, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This letter's as long as a sermon, faith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 9.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, Nov. 11, 1710.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I dined to-day, by invitation, with the Secretary of State, Mr. St. John.
+ Mr. Harley came in to us before dinner, and made me his excuses for not
+ dining with us, because he was to receive people who came to propose
+ advancing money to the Government: there dined with us only Mr. Lewis, and
+ Dr. Freind(1) (that writ "Lord Peterborow's Actions in Spain"). I stayed
+ with them till just now between ten and eleven, and was forced again to
+ give my eighth to the bellman, which I did with my own hands, rather than
+ keep it till next post. The Secretary used me with all the kindness in the
+ world. Prior came in after dinner; and, upon an occasion, he (the
+ Secretary) said, "The best thing I ever read is not yours, but Dr. Swift's
+ on Vanbrugh"; which I do not reckon so very good neither.(2) But Prior was
+ damped, until I stuffed him with two or three compliments. I am thinking
+ what a veneration we used to have for Sir William Temple, because he might
+ have been Secretary of State at fifty; and here is a young fellow, hardly
+ thirty, in that employment.(3) His father is a man of pleasure,(4) that
+ walks the Mall, and frequents St. James's Coffee-house, and the
+ chocolate-houses; and the young son is principal Secretary of State. Is
+ there not something very odd in that? He told me, among other things, that
+ Mr. Harley complained he could keep nothing from me, I had the way so much
+ of getting into him. I knew that was a refinement; and so I told him, and
+ it was so: indeed, it is hard to see these great men use me like one who
+ was their betters, and the puppies with you in Ireland hardly regarding
+ me: but there are some reasons for all this, which I will tell you when we
+ meet. At coming home, I saw a letter from your mother, in answer to one I
+ sent her two days ago. It seems she is in town; but cannot come out in a
+ morning, just as you said; and God knows when I shall be at leisure in an
+ afternoon: for if I should send her a penny-post letter, and afterwards
+ not be able to meet her, it would vex me; and, besides, the days are
+ short, and why she cannot come early in a morning, before she is wanted, I
+ cannot imagine. I will desire her to let Lady Giffard know that she hears
+ I am in town; and that she would go to see me, to inquire after you. I
+ wonder she will confine herself so much to that old beast's humour. You
+ know I cannot in honour see Lady Giffard, and consequently not go into her
+ house. This I think is enough for the first time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. And how could you write with such thin paper? (I forgot to say this in
+ my former.) Cannot you get thicker? Why, that's a common caution that
+ writing-masters give their scholars; you must have heard it a hundred
+ times. 'Tis this:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "If paper be thin,
+ Ink will slip in;
+ But, if it be thick,
+ You may write with a stick."(5)
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I had a letter to-day from poor Mrs. Long,(6) giving me an account of her
+ present life, obscure in a remote country town, and how easy she is under
+ it. Poor creature! 'tis just such an alteration in life, as if Presto
+ should be banished from MD, and condemned to converse with Mrs. Raymond. I
+ dined to-day with Ford, Sir Richard Levinge,(7) etc., at a place where
+ they board, hard by. I was lazy, and not very well, sitting so long with
+ company yesterday. I have been very busy writing this evening at home, and
+ had a fire: I am spending my second half-bushel of coals; and now am in
+ bed, and 'tis late.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. I dined to-day in the City, and then went to christen Will
+ Frankland's(8) child; and Lady Falconbridge(9) was one of the godmothers:
+ this is a daughter of Oliver Cromwell, and extremely like him by his
+ pictures that I have seen. I stayed till almost eleven, and am now come
+ home and gone to bed. My business in the City was, to thank Stratford for
+ a kindness he has done me, which now I will tell you. I found Bank Stock
+ was fallen thirty-four in the hundred, and was mighty desirous to buy it;
+ but I was a little too late for the cheapest time, being hindered by
+ business here; for I was so wise to guess to a day when it would fall. My
+ project was this: I had three hundred pounds in Ireland; and so I writ to
+ Mr. Stratford in the City, to desire he would buy me three hundred pounds
+ in Bank Stock, and that he should keep the papers, and that I would be
+ bound to pay him for them; and, if it should rise or fall, I would take my
+ chance, and pay him interest in the meantime. I showed my letter to one or
+ two people who understand those things; and they said money was so hard to
+ be got here, that no man would do it for me. However, Stratford, who is
+ the most generous man alive, has done it: but it costs one hundred pounds
+ and a half, that is, ten shillings; so that three hundred pounds cost me
+ three hundred pounds and thirty shillings. This was done about a week ago,
+ and I can have five pounds for my bargain already. Before it fell, it was
+ one hundred and thirty pounds; and we are sure it will be the same again.
+ I told you I writ to your mother, to desire that Lady Giffard would do the
+ same with what she owes you; but she tells your mother she has no money. I
+ would to God all you had in the world was there. Whenever you lend money,
+ take this rule, to have two people bound, who have both visible fortunes;
+ for they will hardly die together; and, when one dies, you fall upon the
+ other, and make him add another security: and if Rathburn (now I have his
+ name) pays you in your money, let me know, and I will direct Parvisol
+ accordingly: however, he shall wait on you and know. So, ladies, enough of
+ business for one night. Paaaaast twelvvve o'clock. I must only add, that,
+ after a long fit of rainy weather, it has been fair two or three days, and
+ is this day grown cold and frosty; so that you must give poor little
+ Presto leave to have a fire in his chamber morning and evening too; and he
+ will do as much for you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. What, has your Chancellor(10) lost his senses, like Will Crowe?(11) I
+ forgot to tell Dingley that I was yesterday at Ludgate, bespeaking the
+ spectacles at the great shop there, and shall have them in a day or two.
+ This has been an insipid day. I dined with Mrs. Vanhomrigh, and came
+ gravely home, after just visiting the Coffee-house. Sir Richard Cox,(12)
+ they say, is sure of going over Lord Chancellor, who is as arrant a puppy
+ as ever ate bread: but the Duke of Ormond has a natural affection to
+ puppies; which is a thousand pities, being none himself. I have been
+ amusing myself at home till now, and in bed bid you good-night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. I have been visiting this morning, but nobody was at home, Secretary
+ St. John, Sir Thomas Hanmer,(13) Sir Chancellor Cox-comb, etc. I attended
+ the Duke of Ormond with about fifty other Irish gentlemen at Skinners'
+ Hall, where the Londonderry Society laid out three hundred pounds to treat
+ us and his Grace with a dinner. Three great tables with the dessert laid
+ in mighty figure. Sir Richard Levinge and I got discreetly to the head of
+ the second table, to avoid the crowd at the first: but it was so cold, and
+ so confounded a noise with the trumpets and hautboys, that I grew weary,
+ and stole away before the second course came on; so I can give you no
+ account of it, which is a thousand pities. I called at Ludgate for
+ Dingley's glasses, and shall have them in a day or two; and I doubt it
+ will cost me thirty shillings for a microscope, but not without Stella's
+ permission; for I remember she is a virtuoso. Shall I buy it or no? 'Tis
+ not the great bulky ones, nor the common little ones, to impale a louse
+ (saving your presence) upon a needle's point; but of a more exact sort,
+ and clearer to the sight, with all its equipage in a little trunk that you
+ may carry in your pocket. Tell me, sirrah, shall I buy it or not for you?
+ I came home straight, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. I dined to-day in the city with Mr. Manley,(14) who invited Mr.
+ Addison and me, and some other friends, to his lodging, and entertained us
+ very handsomely. I returned with Mr. Addison, and loitered till nine in
+ the Coffee-house, where I am hardly known, by going so seldom. I am here
+ soliciting for Trounce; you know him: he was gunner in the former yacht,
+ and would fain be so in the present one if you remember him, a good,
+ lusty, fresh-coloured fellow. Shall I stay till I get another letter from
+ MD before I close up this? Mr. Addison and I meet a little seldomer than
+ formerly, although we are still at bottom as good friends as ever, but
+ differ a little about party.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. To-day I went to Lewis at the Secretary's office; where I saw and
+ spoke to Mr. Harley, who promised, in a few days, to finish the rest of my
+ business. I reproached him for putting me on the necessity of minding him
+ of it, and rallied him, etc., which he took very well. I dined to-day with
+ one Mr. Gore, elder brother to a young merchant of my acquaintance; and
+ Stratford and my other friend merchants dined with us, where I stayed
+ late, drinking claret and burgundy; and am just got to bed, and will say
+ no more, but that it now begins to be time to have a letter from my own
+ little MD; for the last I had above a fortnight ago, and the date was old
+ too.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. To-day I dined with Lewis and Prior at an eating-house, but with
+ Lewis's wine. Lewis went away, and Prior and I sat on, where we
+ complimented one another for an hour or two upon our mutual wit and
+ poetry. Coming home at seven, a gentleman unknown stopped me in the Pall
+ Mall, and asked my advice; said he had been to see the Queen (who was just
+ come to town), and the people in waiting would not let him see her; that
+ he had two hundred thousand men ready to serve her in the war; that he
+ knew the Queen perfectly well, and had an apartment at Court, and if she
+ heard he was there, she would send for him immediately; that she owed him
+ two hundred thousand pounds, etc., and he desired my opinion, whether he
+ should go try again whether he could see her; or because, perhaps, she was
+ weary after her journey, whether he had not better stay till to-morrow. I
+ had a mind to get rid of my companion, and begged him of all love to go
+ and wait on her immediately; for that, to my knowledge, the Queen would
+ admit him; that this was an affair of great importance, and required
+ despatch: and I instructed him to let me know the success of his business,
+ and come to the Smyrna Coffee-house, where I would wait for him till
+ midnight; and so ended this adventure. I would have fain given the man
+ half a crown; but was afraid to offer it him, lest he should be offended;
+ for, beside his money, he said he had a thousand pounds a year. I came
+ home not early; and so, madams both, goodnight, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. I dined to-day with poor Lord Mountjoy, who is ill of the gout; and
+ this evening I christened our coffee-man Elliot's(15) child, where the
+ rogue had a most noble supper, and Steele and I sat among some scurvy
+ company over a bowl of punch; so that I am come home late, young women,
+ and can't stay to write to little rogues.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. I loitered at home, and dined with Sir Andrew Fountaine at his
+ lodging, and then came home: a silly day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21. I was visiting all this morning, and then went to the Secretary's
+ office, and found Mr. Harley, with whom I dined; and Secretary St. John,
+ etc., and Harley promised in a very few days to finish what remains of my
+ business. Prior was of the company, and we all dine at the Secretary's
+ to-morrow. I saw Stella's mother this morning: she came early, and we
+ talked an hour. I wish you would propose to Lady Giffard to take the three
+ hundred pounds out of her hands, and give her common interest for life,
+ and security that you will pay her: the Bishop of Clogher, or any friend,
+ would be security for you, if you gave them counter-security; and it may
+ be argued that it will pass better to be in your hands than hers, in case
+ of mortality, etc. Your mother says, if you write, she will second it; and
+ you may write to your mother, and then it will come from her. She tells me
+ Lady Giffard has a mind to see me, by her discourse; but I told her what
+ to say, with a vengeance. She told Lady Giffard she was going to see me:
+ she looks extremely well. I am writing(16) in my bed like a tiger; and so
+ good-night, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22. I dined with Secretary St. John; and Lord Dartmouth, who is t'other
+ Secretary, dined with us, and Lord Orrery(17) and Prior, etc. Harley
+ called, but could not dine with us, and would have had me away while I was
+ at dinner; but I did not like the company he was to have. We stayed till
+ eight, and I called at the Coffee-house, and looked where the letters lie;
+ but no letter directed for Mr. Presto: at last I saw a letter to Mr.
+ Addison, and it looked like a rogue's hand; so I made the fellow give it
+ me, and opened it before him, and saw three letters all for myself: so,
+ truly, I put them in my pocket, and came home to my lodging. Well, and so
+ you shall hear: well, and so I found one of them in Dingley's hand, and
+ t'other in Stella's, and the third in Domville's.(18) Well, so you shall
+ hear; so, said I to myself, What now, two letters from MD together? But I
+ thought there was something in the wind; so I opened one, and I opened
+ t'other; and so you shall hear, one was from Walls. Well, but t'other was
+ from our own dear MD; yes it was. O faith, have you received my seventh,
+ young women, already? Then I must send this to-morrow, else there will be
+ old(19) doings at our house, faith.&mdash;Well, I won't answer your letter
+ in this: no, faith, catch me at that, and I never saw the like. Well; but
+ as to Walls, tell him (with service to him and wife, etc.) that I have no
+ imagination of Mr. Pratt's(20) losing his place: and while Pratt
+ continues, Clements is in no danger; and I have already engaged Lord
+ Hyde(21) he speaks of, for Pratt and twenty others; but, if such a thing
+ should happen, I will do what I can. I have above ten businesses of other
+ people's now on my hands, and, I believe, shall miscarry in half. It is
+ your sixth I now have received. I writ last post to the Bishop of Clogher
+ again. Shall I send this to-morrow? Well, I will, to oblige MD. Which
+ would you rather, a short letter every week, or a long one every
+ fortnight? A long one; well, it shall be done, and so good-night. Well,
+ but is this a long one? No, I warrant you: too long for naughty girls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23. I only ask, have you got both the ten pounds, or only the first; I
+ hope you mean both. Pray be good housewives; and I beg you to walk when
+ you can, for health. Have you the horse in town? and do you ever ride him?
+ how often? Confess. Ahhh, sirrah, have I caught you? Can you contrive to
+ let Mrs. Fenton(22) know, that the request she has made me in her letter I
+ will use what credit I have to bring about, although I hear it is very
+ difficult, and I doubt I shall not succeed? Cox is not to be your
+ Chancellor: all joined against him. I have been supping with Lord
+ Peterborow at his house, with Prior, Lewis, and Dr. Freind. 'Tis the
+ ramblingest lying rogue on earth. Dr. Raymond is come to town: 'tis late,
+ and so I bid you good-night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24. I tell you, pretty management! Ned Southwell told me the other day he
+ had a letter from the bishops of Ireland, with an address to the Duke of
+ Ormond, to intercede with the Queen to take off the First-Fruits. I dined
+ with him to-day, and saw it, with another letter to him from the Bishop of
+ Kildare,(23) to call upon me for the papers, etc.; and I had last post one
+ from the Archbishop of Dublin, telling me the reason of this proceeding;
+ that, upon hearing the Duke of Ormond was declared Lord Lieutenant, they
+ met; and the bishops were for this project, and talked coldly of my being
+ solicitor, as one that was favoured by t'other party, etc., but desired
+ that I would still solicit.(24) Now the wisdom of this is admirable; for I
+ had given the Archbishop an account of my reception from Mr. Harley, and
+ how he had spoken to the Queen, and promised it should be done; but Mr.
+ Harley ordered me to tell no person alive. Some time after, he gave me
+ leave to let the Primate and Archbishop know that the Queen had remitted
+ the First-Fruits; and that in a short time they should have an account of
+ it in form from Lord Dartmouth, Secretary of State. So while their letter
+ was on the road to the Duke of Ormond and Southwell, mine was going to
+ them with an account of the thing being done. I writ a very warm
+ answer(25) to the Archbishop immediately; and showed my resentments, as I
+ ought, against the bishops; only, in good manners, excepting himself. I
+ wonder what they will say when they hear the thing is done. I was
+ yesterday forced to tell Southwell so, that the Queen had done it, etc.;
+ for he said, my Lord Duke would think of it some months hence, when he was
+ going for Ireland; and he had it three years in doing formerly, without
+ any success. I give you free leave to say, on occasion, that it is done;
+ and that Mr. Harley prevailed on the Queen to do it, etc., as you please.
+ As I hope to live, I despise the credit of it, out of an excess of pride;
+ and desire you will not give me the least merit when you talk of it; but I
+ would vex the bishops, and have it spread that Mr. Harley had done it:
+ pray do so. Your mother sent me last night a parcel of wax candles, and a
+ bandbox full of small plumcakes. I thought it had been something for you;
+ and, without opening them, sent answer by the maid that brought them, that
+ I would take care to send the things, etc.; but I will write her thanks.
+ Is this a long letter, sirrahs? Now, are you satisfied? I have had no fit
+ since the first: I drink brandy every morning, and take pills every night.
+ Never fear, I an't vexed at this puppy business of the bishops, although I
+ was a little at first. I will tell you my reward: Mr. Harley will think he
+ has done me a favour; the Duke of Ormond, perhaps, that I have put a
+ neglect on him; and the bishops in Ireland, that I have done nothing at
+ all. So goes the world. But I have got above all this, and, perhaps, I
+ have better reason for it than they know: and so you shall hear no more of
+ First-Fruits, dukes, Harleys, archbishops, and Southwells.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have slipped off Raymond upon some of his countrymen, to show him the
+ town, etc., and I lend him Patrick. He desires to sit with me in the
+ evenings; upon which I have given Patrick positive orders that I am not
+ within at evenings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0013" id="link2H_4_0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 10.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, Nov. 25, 1710.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I will tell you something that's plaguy silly: I had forgot to say on the
+ 23d in my last, where I dined; and because I had done it constantly, I
+ thought it was a great omission, and was going to interline it; but at
+ last the silliness of it made me cry, Pshah, and I let it alone. I was
+ to-day to see the Parliament meet; but only saw a great crowd; and Ford
+ and I went to see the tombs at Westminster, and sauntered so long I was
+ forced to go to an eating-house for my dinner. Bromley(1) is chosen
+ Speaker, nemine contradicente: Do you understand those two words? And
+ Pompey, Colonel Hill's(2) black, designs to stand Speaker for the
+ footmen.(3) I am engaged to use my interest for him, and have spoken to
+ Patrick to get him some votes. We are now all impatient for the Queen's
+ speech, what she will say about removing the Ministry, etc. I have got a
+ cold, and I don't know how; but got it I have, and am hoarse: I don't know
+ whether it will grow better or worse. What's that to you? I won't answer
+ your letter to-night. I'll keep you a little longer in suspense: I can't
+ send it. Your mother's cakes are very good, and one of them serves me for
+ a breakfast, and so I'll go sleep like a good boy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26. I have got a cruel cold, and stayed within all this day in my
+ nightgown, and dined on sixpennyworth of victuals, and read and writ, and
+ was denied to everybody. Dr. Raymond(4) called often, and I was denied;
+ and at last, when I was weary, I let him come up, and asked him, without
+ consequence, how Patrick denied me, and whether he had the art of it? So
+ by this means he shall be used to have me denied to him; otherwise he
+ would be a plaguy trouble and hindrance to me: he has sat with me two
+ hours, and drank a pint of ale cost me fivepence, and smoked his pipe, and
+ it is now past eleven that he is just gone. Well, my eighth is with you
+ now, young women; and your seventh to me is somewhere in a post-boy's bag;
+ and so go to your gang of deans, and Stoytes, and Walls, and lose your
+ money; go, sauceboxes: and so good-night, and be happy, dear rogues. Oh,
+ but your box was sent to Dr. Hawkshaw by Sterne, and you will have it with
+ Hawkshaw, and spectacles, etc., etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27. To-day Mr. Harley met me in the Court of Requests,(5) and whispered me
+ to dine with him. At dinner I told him what those bishops had done, and
+ the difficulty I was under. He bid me never trouble myself; he would tell
+ the Duke of Ormond the business was done, and that he need not concern
+ himself about it. So now I am easy, and they may hang themselves for a
+ parcel of insolent, ungrateful rascals. I suppose I told you in my last,
+ how they sent an address to the Duke of Ormond, and a letter to Southwell,
+ to call on me for the papers, after the thing was over; but they had not
+ received my letter, though the Archbishop might, by what I writ to him,
+ have expected it would be done. Well, there is an end of that; and in a
+ little time the Queen will send them notice, etc. And so the methods will
+ be settled; and then I shall think of returning, although the baseness of
+ those bishops makes me love Ireland less than I did.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28. Lord Halifax sent to invite me to dinner; where I stayed till six, and
+ crossed him in all his Whig talk, and made him often come over to me. I
+ know he makes court to the new men, although he affects to talk like a
+ Whig. I had a letter to-day from the Bishop of Clogher; but I writ to him
+ lately, that I would obey his commands to the Duke of Ormond. He says I
+ bid him read the London "Shaver," and that you both swore it was "Shaver,"
+ and not "Shower."(6) You all lie, and you are puppies, and can't read
+ Presto's hand. The Bishop is out entirely in his conjectures of my share
+ in the Tatlers.&mdash;I have other things to mind, and of much greater
+ importance;(7) else I have little to do to be acquainted with a new
+ Ministry, who consider me a little more than Irish bishops do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29. Now for your saucy, good dear letter: let me see, what does it say?
+ come then. I dined to-day with Ford, and went home early; he debauched(8)
+ me to his chamber again with a bottle of wine till twelve: so good-night.
+ I cannot write an answer now, you rogues.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30. To-day I have been visiting, which I had long neglected; and I dined
+ with Mrs. Barton alone; and sauntered at the Coffee-house till past eight,
+ and have been busy till eleven, and now I'll answer your letter, saucebox.
+ Well, let me see now again. My wax candle's almost out, but however I'll
+ begin. Well then, do not be so tedious, Mr. Presto; what can you say to
+ MD's letter? Make haste, have done with your preambles&mdash;Why, I say I
+ am glad you are so often abroad; your mother thinks it is want of exercise
+ hurts you, and so do I. (She called here to-night, but I was not within,
+ that's by the bye.) Sure you do not deceive me, Stella, when you say you
+ are in better health than you were these three weeks; for Dr. Raymond told
+ me yesterday, that Smyth of the Blind Quay had been telling Mr. Leigh that
+ he left you extremely ill; and in short, spoke so, that he almost put poor
+ Leigh into tears, and would have made me run distracted; though your
+ letter is dated the 11th instant, and I saw Smyth in the city above a
+ fortnight ago, as I passed by in a coach. Pray, pray, don't write, Stella,
+ until you are mighty, mighty, mighty, mighty well in your eyes, and are
+ sure it won't do you the least hurt. Or come, I'll tell you what; you,
+ Mistress Stella, shall write your share at five or six sittings, one
+ sitting a day; and then comes Dingley all together, and then Stella a
+ little crumb towards the end, to let us see she remembers Presto; and then
+ conclude with something handsome and genteel, as your most
+ humblecumdumble, or, etc. O Lord! does Patrick write word of my not coming
+ till spring? Insolent man! he know my secrets? No; as my Lord Mayor said,
+ No; if I thought my shirt knew, etc. Faith, I will come as soon as it is
+ any way proper for me to come; but, to say the truth, I am at present a
+ little involved with the present Ministry in some certain things (which I
+ tell you as a secret); and soon as ever I can clear my hands, I will stay
+ no longer; for I hope the First-Fruit business will be soon over in all
+ its forms. But, to say the truth, the present Ministry have a difficult
+ task, and want me, etc. Perhaps they may be just as grateful as others:
+ but, according to the best judgment I have, they are pursuing the true
+ interest of the public; and therefore I am glad to contribute what is in
+ my power. For God's sake, not a word of this to any alive.&mdash;Your
+ Chancellor?(9) Why, madam, I can tell you he has been dead this fortnight.
+ Faith, I could hardly forbear our little language about a nasty dead
+ Chancellor, as you may see by the blot.(10) Ploughing? A pox plough them;
+ they'll plough me to nothing. But have you got your money, both the ten
+ pounds? How durst he pay you the second so soon? Pray be good huswifes.
+ Ay, well, and Joe, why, I had a letter lately from Joe, desiring I would
+ take some care of their poor town,(11) who, he says, will lose their
+ liberties. To which I desired Dr. Raymond would return answer, that the
+ town had behaved themselves so ill to me, so little regarded the advice I
+ gave them, and disagreed so much among themselves, that I was resolved
+ never to have more to do with them; but that whatever personal kindness I
+ could do to Joe, should be done. Pray, when you happen to see Joe, tell
+ him this, lest Raymond should have blundered or forgotten&mdash;Poor Mrs.
+ Wesley!&mdash;Why these poligyes(12) for being abroad? Why should you be
+ at home at all, until Stella is quite well?&mdash;So, here is Mistress
+ Stella again, with her two eggs, etc. My "Shower" admired with you; why,
+ the Bishop of Clogher says, he has seen something of mine of the same
+ sort, better than the "Shower." I suppose he means "The Morning";(13) but
+ it is not half so good. I want your judgment of things, and not your
+ country's. How does MD like it? and do they taste it ALL? etc. I am glad
+ Dean Bolton(14) has paid the twenty pounds. Why should not I chide the
+ Bishop of Clogher for writing to the Archbishop of Cashel,(15) without
+ sending the letter first to me? It does not signify a &mdash;&mdash;; for
+ he has no credit at Court. Stuff&mdash;they are all puppies. I will break
+ your head in good earnest, young woman, for your nasty jest about Mrs.
+ Barton.(16) Unlucky sluttikin, what a word is there! Faith, I was thinking
+ yesterday, when I was with her, whether she could break them or no, and it
+ quite spoilt my imagination. "Mrs. Walls, does Stella win as she
+ pretends?" "No indeed, Doctor; she loses always, and will play so
+ VENTERSOMELY, how can she win?" See here now; an't you an impudent lying
+ slut? Do, open Domville's letter; what does it signify, if you have a
+ mind? Yes, faith, you write smartly with your eyes shut; all was well but
+ the <i>n</i>. See how I can do it; MADAM STELLA, YOUR HUMBLE SERVANT.(17)
+ O, but one may look whether one goes crooked or no, and so write on. I
+ will tell you what you may do; you may write with your eyes half shut,
+ just as when one is going to sleep: I have done so for two or three lines
+ now; it is but just seeing enough to go straight.&mdash;Now, Madam
+ Dingley, I think I bid you tell Mr. Walls that, in case there be occasion,
+ I will serve his friend as far as I can; but I hope there will be none.
+ Yet I believe you will have a new Parliament; but I care not whether you
+ have or no a better. You are mistaken in all your conjectures about the
+ Tatlers. I have given him one or two hints, and you have heard me talk
+ about the Shilling.(18) Faith, these answering letters are very long ones:
+ you have taken up almost the room of a week in journals; and I will tell
+ you what, I saw fellows wearing crosses to-day,(19) and I wondered what
+ was the matter; but just this minute I recollect it is little Presto's
+ birthday; and I was resolved these three days to remember it when it came,
+ but could not. Pray, drink my health to-day at dinner; do, you rogues. Do
+ you like "Sid Hamet's Rod"? Do you understand it all? Well, now at last I
+ have done with your letter, and so I will lay me down to sleep, and about,
+ fair maids; and I hope merry maids all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dec. 1. Morning. I wish Smyth were hanged. I was dreaming the most
+ melancholy things in the world of poor Stella, and was grieving and crying
+ all night.&mdash;Pshah, it is foolish: I will rise and divert myself; so
+ good-morrow; and God of His infinite mercy keep and protect you! The
+ Bishop of Clogher's letter is dated Nov. 21. He says you thought of going
+ with him to Clogher. I am heartily glad of it, and wish you would ride
+ there, and Dingley go in a coach. I have had no fit since my first,
+ although sometimes my head is not quite in good order.&mdash;At night. I
+ was this morning to visit Mr. Pratt, who is come over with poor, sick Lord
+ Shelburne: they made me dine with them; and there I stayed, like a booby,
+ till eight, looking over them at ombre, and then came home. Lord
+ Shelburne's giddiness is turned into a colic, and he looks miserably.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. Steele, the rogue, has done the imprudentest thing in the world: he
+ said something in a Tatler,(20) that we ought to use the word Great
+ Britain, and not England, in common conversation, as, "The finest lady in
+ Great Britain," etc. Upon this, Rowe, Prior, and I sent him a letter,
+ turning this into ridicule. He has to-day printed the letter,(21) and
+ signed it J.S., M.P., and N.R., the first letters of all our names.
+ Congreve told me to-day, he smoked it immediately. Congreve and I, and Sir
+ Charles Wager, dined to-day at Delaval's, the Portugal Envoy; and I stayed
+ there till eight, and came home, and am now writing to you before I do
+ business, because that dog Patrick is not at home, and the fire is not
+ made, and I am not in my gear. Pox take him!&mdash;I was looking by chance
+ at the top of this side, and find I make plaguy mistakes in words; so that
+ you must fence against that as well as bad writing. Faith, I can't nor
+ won't read what I have written. (Pox of this puppy!) Well, I'll leave you
+ till I am got to bed, and then I will say a word or two.&mdash;Well, 'tis
+ now almost twelve, and I have been busy ever since, by a fire too (I have
+ my coals by half a bushel at a time, I'll assure you), and now I am got to
+ bed. Well, and what have you to say to Presto now he is abed? Come now,
+ let us hear your speeches. No, 'tis a lie; I an't sleepy yet. Let us sit
+ up a little longer, and talk. Well, where have you been to-day, that you
+ are but just this minute come home in a coach? What have you lost? Pay the
+ coachman, Stella. No, faith, not I, he'll grumble.&mdash;What new
+ acquaintance have you got? come, let us hear. I have made Delaval promise
+ to send me some Brazil tobacco from Portugal for you, Madam Dingley. I
+ hope you will have your chocolate and spectacles before this comes to you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. Pshaw, I must be writing to these dear saucy brats every night, whether
+ I will or no, let me have what business I will, or come home ever so late,
+ or be ever so sleepy; but an old saying, and a true one,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Be you lords, or be you earls,
+ You must write to naughty girls."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I was to-day at Court, and saw Raymond among the Beefeaters, staying to
+ see the Queen: so I put him in a better station, made two or three dozen
+ of bows, and went to church, and then to Court again, to pick up a dinner,
+ as I did with Sir John Stanley; and then we went to visit Lord Mountjoy,
+ and just now left him; and 'tis near eleven at night, young women; and
+ methinks this letter comes pretty near to the bottom, and 'tis but eight
+ days since the date, and don't think I'll write on the other side, I thank
+ you for nothing. Faith, if I would use you to letters on sheets as broad
+ as this room, you would always expect them from me. O, faith, I know you
+ well enough; but an old saying, etc.,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Two sides in a sheet,
+ And one in a street."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I think that's but a silly old saying; and so I'll go to sleep, and do you
+ so too.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. I dined to-day with Mrs. Vanhomrigh, and then came home, and studied
+ till eleven. No adventure at all to-day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. So I went to the Court of Requests (we have had the Devil and all of
+ rain by the bye) to pick up a dinner; and Henley made me go dine with him
+ and one Colonel Bragg(22) at a tavern; cost me money, faith. Congreve was
+ to be there, but came not. I came with Henley to the Coffee-house, where
+ Lord Salisbury(23) seemed mighty desirous to talk with me; and, while he
+ was wriggling himself into my favour, that dog Henley asked me aloud,
+ whether I would go to see Lord Somers as I had promised (which was a lie);
+ and all to vex poor Lord Salisbury, who is a high Tory. He played two or
+ three other such tricks; and I was forced to leave my lord, and I came
+ home at seven, and have been writing ever since, and will now go to bed.
+ The other day I saw Jack Temple(24) in the Court of Requests: it was the
+ first time of seeing him; so we talked two or three careless words, and
+ parted. Is it true that your Recorder and Mayor, and fanatic aldermen, a
+ month or two ago, at a solemn feast, drank Mr. Harley's, Lord
+ Rochester's,(25) and other Tory healths? Let me know; it was confidently
+ said here.&mdash;The scoundrels! It shan't do, Tom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. When is this letter to go, I wonder? harkee, young women, tell me that.
+ Saturday next for certain, and not before: then it will be just a
+ fortnight; time enough for naughty girls, and long enough for two letters,
+ faith. Congreve and Delaval have at last prevailed on Sir Godfrey Kneller
+ to entreat me to let him draw my picture for nothing; but I know not yet
+ when I shall sit.(26)&mdash;It is such monstrous rainy weather, that there
+ is no doing with it. Secretary St. John sent to me this morning, that my
+ dining with him to-day was put off till to-morrow; so I peaceably sat with
+ my neighbour Ford, dined with him, and came home at six, and am now in bed
+ as usual; and now it is time to have another letter from MD, yet I would
+ not have it till this goes; for that would look like two letters for one.
+ Is it not whimsical that the Dean has never once written to me? And I find
+ the Archbishop very silent to that letter I sent him with an account that
+ the business was done. I believe he knows not what to write or say; and I
+ have since written twice to him, both times with a vengeance.(27) Well, go
+ to bed, sirrahs, and so will I. But have you lost to-day? Three shillings!
+ O fie, O fie!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. No, I won't send this letter to-day, nor till Saturday, faith; and I am
+ so afraid of one from MD between this and that; if it comes, I will just
+ say I received a letter, and that is all. I dined to-day with Mr.
+ Secretary St. John, where were Lord Anglesea,(28) Sir Thomas Hanmer,
+ Prior, Freind, etc., and then made a debauch after nine at Prior's house,
+ and have eaten cold pie, and I hate the thoughts of it, and I am full, and
+ I don't like it, and I will go to bed, and it is late, and so good-night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. To-day I dined with Mr. Harley and Prior; but Mr. St. John did not
+ come, though he promised: he chid me for not seeing him oftener. Here is a
+ damned, libellous pamphlet come out against Lord Wharton, giving the
+ character first, and then telling some of his actions: the character is
+ very well, but the facts indifferent.(29) It has been sent by dozens to
+ several gentlemen's lodgings, and I had one or two of them; but nobody
+ knows the author or printer. We are terribly afraid of the plague; they
+ say it is at Newcastle.(30) I begged Mr. Harley for the love of God to
+ take some care about it, or we are all ruined. There have been orders for
+ all ships from the Baltic to pass their quarantine before they land; but
+ they neglect it. You remember I have been afraid these two years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. O, faith, you are a saucy rogue. I have had your sixth letter just now,
+ before this is gone; but I will not answer a word of it, only that I never
+ was giddy since my first fit; but I have had a cold just a fortnight, and
+ cough with it still morning and evening; but it will go off. It is,
+ however, such abominable weather that no creature can walk. They say here
+ three of your Commissioners will be turned out, Ogle, South, and St.
+ Quintin;(31) and that Dick Stewart(32) and Ludlow will be two of the new
+ ones. I am a little soliciting for another: it is poor Lord Abercorn,(33)
+ but that is a secret; I mean, that I befriend him is a secret; but I
+ believe it is too late, by his own fault and ill fortune. I dined with him
+ to-day. I am heartily sorry you do not go to Clogher, faith, I am; and so
+ God Almighty protect poor, dear, dear, dear, dearest MD. Farewell till
+ to-night. I'll begin my eleventh to-night; so I am always writing to
+ little MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0014" id="link2H_4_0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 11.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, Dec. 9, 1710.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ So, young women, I have just sent my tenth to the post-office, and, as I
+ told you, have received your seventh (faith, I am afraid I mistook, and
+ said your sixth, and then we shall be all in confusion this month.) Well,
+ I told you I dined with Lord Abercorn to-day; and that is enough till by
+ and bye; for I must go write idle things, and twittle twattle.(1) What's
+ here to do with your little MD's? and so I put this by for a while. 'Tis
+ now late, and I can only say MD is a dear, saucy rogue, and what then?
+ Presto loves them the better.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. This son of a b&mdash;&mdash; Patrick is out of the way, and I can do
+ nothing; am forced to borrow coals: 'tis now six o'clock, and I am come
+ home after a pure walk in the park; delicate weather, begun only to-day. A
+ terrible storm last night: we hear one of your packet-boats is cast away,
+ and young Beau Swift(2) in it, and General Sankey:(3) I know not the
+ truth; you will before me. Raymond talks of leaving the town in a few
+ days, and going in a month to Ireland, for fear his wife should be too far
+ gone, and forced to be brought to bed here. I think he is in the right;
+ but perhaps this packet-boat will fright him. He has no relish for London;
+ and I do not wonder at it. He has got some Templars from Ireland that show
+ him the town. I do not let him see me above twice a week, and that only
+ while I am dressing in the morning.&mdash;So, now the puppy's come in, and
+ I have got my own ink, but a new pen; and so now you are rogues and
+ sauceboxes till I go to bed; for I must go study, sirrahs. Now I think of
+ it, tell the Bishop of Clogher, he shall not cheat me of one inch of my
+ bell metal. You know it is nothing but to save the town money; and
+ Enniskillen can afford it better than Laracor: he shall have but one
+ thousand five hundred weight. I have been reading, etc., as usual, and am
+ now going to bed; and I find this day's article is long enough: so get you
+ gone till to-morrow, and then. I dined with Sir Matthew Dudley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. I am come home again as yesterday, and the puppy had again locked up
+ my ink, notwithstanding all I said to him yesterday; but he came home a
+ little after me, so all is well: they are lighting my fire, and I'll go
+ study. The fair weather is gone again, and it has rained all day. I do not
+ like this open weather, though some say it is healthy. They say it is a
+ false report about the plague at Newcastle.(4) I have no news to-day: I
+ dined with Mrs. Vanhomrigh, to desire them to buy me a scarf; and Lady
+ Abercorn(5) is to buy me another, to see who does best: mine is all in
+ rags. I saw the Duke of Richmond(6) yesterday at Court again, but would
+ not speak to him: I believe we are fallen out. I am now in bed; and it has
+ rained all this evening, like wildfire: have you so much rain in your
+ town? Raymond was in a fright, as I expected, upon the news of this
+ shipwreck; but I persuaded him, and he leaves this town in a week. I got
+ him acquainted with Sir Robert Raymond,(7) the Solicitor-General, who owns
+ him to be of his family; and I believe it may do him a kindness, by being
+ recommended to your new Lord Chancellor.&mdash;I had a letter from Mrs.
+ Long, that has quite turned my stomach against her: no less than two nasty
+ jests in it, with dashes to suppose them. She is corrupted in that country
+ town(8) with vile conversation.&mdash;I will not answer your letter till I
+ have leisure: so let this go on as it will, what care I? what cares saucy
+ Presto?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. I was to-day at the Secretary's office with Lewis, and in came Lord
+ Rivers;(9) who took Lewis out and whispered him; and then came up to me to
+ desire my acquaintance, etc., so we bowed and complimented a while, and
+ parted and I dined with Phil. Savage(10) and his Irish Club, at their
+ boarding-place; and, passing an evening scurvily enough, did not come home
+ till eight. Mr. Addison and I hardly meet once a fortnight; his Parliament
+ and my different friendships keep us asunder. Sir Matthew Dudley turned
+ away his butler yesterday morning; and at night the poor fellow died
+ suddenly in the streets: was not it an odd event? But what care you? But
+ then I knew the butler.&mdash;Why, it seems your packet-boat is not lost:
+ psha, how silly that is, when I had already gone through the forms, and
+ said it was a sad thing, and that I was sorry for it! But when must I
+ answer this letter of our MD's? Here it is, it lies between this paper on
+ t'other side of the leaf: one of these odd-come-shortly's I'll consider,
+ and so good-night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. Morning. I am to go trapesing with Lady Kerry(11) and Mrs. Pratt(12)
+ to see sights all this day: they engaged me yesterday morning at tea. You
+ hear the havoc making in the army: Meredith, Maccartney, and Colonel
+ Honeywood(13) are obliged to sell their commands at half-value, and leave
+ the army, for drinking destruction to the present Ministry, and dressing
+ up a hat on a stick, and calling it Harley; then drinking a glass with one
+ hand, and discharging a pistol with the other at the maukin,(14) wishing
+ it were Harley himself; and a hundred other such pretty tricks, as
+ inflaming their soldiers, and foreign Ministers, against the late changes
+ at Court. Cadogan(15) has had a little paring: his mother(16) told me
+ yesterday he had lost the place of Envoy; but I hope they will go no
+ further with him, for he was not at those mutinous meetings.&mdash;Well,
+ these saucy jades take up so much of my time with writing to them in a
+ morning; but, faith, I am glad to see you whenever I can: a little snap
+ and away; and so hold your tongue, for I must rise: not a word, for your
+ life. How nowww? So, very well; stay till I come home, and then, perhaps,
+ you may hear further from me. And where will you go to-day, for I can't be
+ with you for these ladies? It is a rainy, ugly day. I'd have you send for
+ Walls, and go to the Dean's; but don't play small games when you lose.
+ You'll be ruined by Manilio, Basto, the queen, and two small trumps, in
+ red.(17) I confess 'tis a good hand against the player: but then there are
+ Spadilio, Punto, the king, strong trumps, against you, which, with one
+ trump more, are three tricks ten ace: for, suppose you play your Manilio&mdash;Oh,
+ silly, how I prate, and can't get away from this MD in a morning! Go, get
+ you gone, dear naughty girls, and let me rise. There, Patrick locked up my
+ ink again the third time last night: the rogue gets the better of me; but
+ I will rise in spite of you, sirrahs.&mdash;At night. Lady Kerry, Mrs.
+ Pratt, Mrs. Cadogan,(18) and I, in one coach; Lady Kerry's son(19) and his
+ governor, and two gentlemen, in another; maids, and misses and little
+ master (Lord Shelburne's(20) children, in a third, all hackneys, set out
+ at ten o'clock this morning from Lord Shelburne's house in Piccadilly to
+ the Tower, and saw all the sights, lions,(21) etc.; then to Bedlam;(22)
+ then dined at the chop-house behind the Exchange; then to Gresham
+ College(23) (but the keeper was not at home); and concluded the night at
+ the Puppet-show,(24) whence we came home safe at eight, and I left them.
+ The ladies were all in mobs(25) (how do you call it?), undrest; and it was
+ the rainiest day that ever dripped; and I am weary; and it is now past
+ eleven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. Stay, I'll answer some of your letter this morning in bed: let me see;
+ come and appear, little letter. Here I am, says he: and what say you to
+ Mrs. MD this morning fresh and fasting? Who dares think MD negligent? I
+ allow them a fortnight; and they give it me. I could fill a letter in a
+ week; but it is longer every day; and so I keep it a fortnight, and then
+ 'tis cheaper by one half. I have never been giddy, dear Stella, since that
+ morning: I have taken a whole box of pills, and kecked(26) at them every
+ night, and drank a pint of brandy at mornings.&mdash;Oh then, you kept
+ Presto's little birthday:(27) would to God I had been with you! I forgot
+ it, as I told you before. REdiculous, madam? I suppose you mean
+ rIdiculous: let me have no more of that; 'tis the author of the
+ Atalantis's(28) spelling. I have mended it in your letter. And can Stella
+ read this writing without hurting her dear eyes? O, faith, I am afraid
+ not. Have a care of those eyes, pray, pray, pretty Stella.&mdash;'Tis well
+ enough what you observe, that, if I writ better, perhaps you would not
+ read so well, being used to this manner; 'tis an alphabet you are used to:
+ you know such a pot-hook makes a letter; and you know what letter, and so
+ and so.&mdash;I'll swear he told me so, and that they were long letters
+ too; but I told him it was a gasconnade of yours, etc. I am talking of the
+ Bishop of Clogher, how he forgot. Turn over.(29) I had not room on t'other
+ side to say that, so I did it on this: I fancy that's a good Irish
+ blunder. Ah, why do not you go down to Clogher, nautinautinautideargirls;
+ I dare not say nauti without dear: O, faith, you govern me. But,
+ seriously, I'm sorry you don't go, as far as I can judge at this distance.
+ No, we would get you another horse; I will make Parvisol get you one. I
+ always doubted that horse of yours: prythee sell him, and let it be a
+ present to me. My heart aches when I think you ride him. Order Parvisol to
+ sell him, and that you are to return me the money: I shall never be easy
+ until he is out of your hands. Faith, I have dreamt five or six times of
+ horses stumbling since I had your letter. If he can't sell him, let him
+ run this winter. Faith, if I was near you, I would whip your &mdash;&mdash;
+ to some tune, for your grave, saucy answer about the Dean and Johnsonibus;
+ I would, young women. And did the Dean preach for me?(30) Very well. Why,
+ would they have me stand here and preach to them? No, the Tatler of the
+ Shilling(31) was not mine, more than the hint, and two or three general
+ heads for it. I have much more important business on my hands; and,
+ besides, the Ministry hate to think that I should help him, and have made
+ reproaches on it; and I frankly told them I would do it no more. This is a
+ secret though, Madam Stella. You win eight shillings? you win eight
+ fiddlesticks. Faith, you say nothing of what you lose, young women.&mdash;I
+ hope Manley is in no great danger; for Ned Southwell is his friend, and so
+ is Sir Thomas Frankland; and his brother John Manley stands up heartily
+ for him. On t'other side, all the gentlemen of Ireland here are furiously
+ against him. Now, Mistress Dingley, an't you an impudent slut, to expect a
+ letter next packet from Presto, when you confess yourself that you had so
+ lately two letters in four days? Unreasonable baggage! No, little Dingley,
+ I am always in bed by twelve; I mean my candle is out by twelve, and I
+ take great care of myself. Pray let everybody know, upon occasion, that
+ Mr. Harley got the First-Fruits from the Queen for the clergy of Ireland,
+ and that nothing remains but the forms, etc. So you say the Dean and you
+ dined at Stoyte's, and Mrs. Stoyte was in raptures that I remembered her.
+ I must do it but seldom, or it will take off her rapture. But what now,
+ you saucy sluts? all this written in a morning, and I must rise and go
+ abroad. Pray stay till night: do not think I will squander mornings upon
+ you, pray, good madam. Faith, if I go on longer in this trick of writing
+ in the morning, I shall be afraid of leaving it off, and think you expect
+ it, and be in awe. Good-morrow, sirrahs, I will rise.&mdash;At night. I
+ went to-day to the Court of Requests (I will not answer the rest of your
+ letter yet, that by the way, in hopes to dine with Mr. Harley: but Lord
+ Dupplin,(32) his son-in-law, told me he did not dine at home; so I was at
+ a loss, until I met with Mr. Secretary St. John, and went home and dined
+ with him, where he told me of a good bite.(33) Lord Rivers told me two
+ days ago, that he was resolved to come Sunday fortnight next to hear me
+ preach before the Queen. I assured him the day was not yet fixed, and I
+ knew nothing of it. To-day the Secretary told me that his father, Sir
+ Harry St. John,(34) and Lord Rivers were to be at St. James's Church, to
+ hear me preach there; and were assured I was to preach: so there will be
+ another bite; for I know nothing of the matter, but that Mr. Harley and
+ St. John are resolved I must preach before the Queen; and the Secretary of
+ State has told me he will give me three weeks' warning; but I desired to
+ be excused, which he will not. St. John, "You shall not be excused":
+ however, I hope they will forget it; for if it should happen, all the
+ puppies hereabouts will throng to hear me, and expect something wonderful,
+ and be plaguily baulked; for I shall preach plain honest stuff. I stayed
+ with St. John till eight, and then came home; and Patrick desired leave to
+ go abroad, and by and by comes up the girl to tell me, a gentleman was
+ below in a coach, who had a bill to pay me; so I let him come up, and who
+ should it be but Mr. Addison and Sam Dopping, to haul me out to supper,
+ where I stayed till twelve. If Patrick had been at home, I should have
+ 'scaped this; for I have taught him to deny me almost as well as Mr.
+ Harley's porter.&mdash;Where did I leave off in MD's letter? let me see.
+ So, now I have it. You are pleased to say, Madam Dingley, that those who
+ go for England can never tell when to come back. Do you mean this as a
+ reflection upon Presto, madam? Sauceboxes, I will come back as soon as I
+ can, as hope saved,(35) and I hope with some advantage, unless all
+ Ministries be alike, as perhaps they may. I hope Hawkshaw is in Dublin
+ before now, and that you have your things, and like your spectacles: if
+ you do not, you shall have better. I hope Dingley's tobacco did not spoil
+ Stella's chocolate, and that all is safe: pray let me know. Mr. Addison
+ and I are different as black and white, and I believe our friendship will
+ go off, by this damned business of party: he cannot bear seeing me fall in
+ so with this Ministry: but I love him still as well as ever, though we
+ seldom meet.&mdash;Hussy, Stella, you jest about poor Congreve's eyes;(36)
+ you do so, hussy; but I'll bang your bones, faith.&mdash;Yes, Steele was a
+ little while in prison, or at least in a spunging-house, some time before
+ I came, but not since.(37)&mdash;Pox on your convocations, and your
+ Lamberts;(38) they write with a vengeance! I suppose you think it a piece
+ of affectation in me to wish your Irish folks would not like my "Shower,";
+ but you are mistaken. I should be glad to have the general applause there
+ as I have here (though I say it); but I have only that of one or two, and
+ therefore I would have none at all, but let you all be in the wrong. I
+ don't know, this is not what I would say; but I am so tosticated with
+ supper and stuff, that I can't express myself.&mdash;What you say of "Sid
+ Hamet" is well enough; that an enemy should like it, and a friend not; and
+ that telling the author would make both change their opinions. Why did you
+ not tell Griffyth(39) that you fancied there was something in it of my
+ manner; but first spur up his commendation to the height, as we served my
+ poor uncle about the sconce that I mended? Well, I desired you to give
+ what I intended for an answer to Mrs. Fenton,(40) to save her postage, and
+ myself trouble; and I hope I have done it, if you han't.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. Lord, what a long day's writing was yesterday's answer to your letter,
+ sirrahs! I dined to-day with Lewis and Ford, whom I have brought
+ acquainted. Lewis told me a pure thing. I had been hankering with Mr.
+ Harley to save Steele his other employment, and have a little mercy on
+ him; and I had been saying the same thing to Lewis, who is Mr. Harley's
+ chief favourite. Lewis tells Mr. Harley how kindly I should take it, if he
+ would be reconciled to Steele, etc. Mr. Harley, on my account, falls in
+ with it, and appoints Steele a time to let him attend him, which Steele
+ accepts with great submission, but never comes, nor sends any excuse.
+ Whether it was blundering, sullenness, insolence, or rancour of party, I
+ cannot tell; but I shall trouble myself no more about him. I believe
+ Addison hindered him out of mere spite, being grated(41) to the soul to
+ think he should ever want my help to save his friend; yet now he is
+ soliciting me to make another of his friends Queen's Secretary at Geneva;
+ and I'll do it if I can; it is poor Pastoral Philips.(42)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. O, why did you leave my picture behind you at t'other lodgings? Forgot
+ it? Well; but pray remember it now, and don't roll it up, d'ye hear; but
+ hang it carefully in some part of your room, where chairs and candles and
+ mop-sticks won't spoil it, sirrahs. No, truly, I will not be godfather to
+ Goody Walls this bout, and I hope she will have no more. There will be no
+ quiet nor cards for this child. I hope it will die the day after the
+ christening. Mr. Harley gave me a paper, with an account of the sentence
+ you speak of against the lads that defaced the statue,(43) and that
+ Ingoldsby(44) reprieved that part of it of standing before the statue. I
+ hope it was never executed. We have got your Broderick out;(45) Doyne(46)
+ is to succeed him, and Cox(47) Doyne. And so there's an end of your
+ letter; 'tis all answered; and now I must go on upon my own stock. Go on,
+ did I say? Why, I have written enough; but this is too soon to send it
+ yet, young women; faith, I dare not use you to it, you'll always expect
+ it; what remains shall be only short journals of a day, and so I'll rise
+ for this morning.&mdash;At night. I dined with my opposite neighbour,
+ Darteneuf; and I was soliciting this day to present the Bishop of Clogher
+ Vice-Chancellor;(48) but it won't do; they are all set against him, and
+ the Duke of Ormond, they say, has resolved to dispose of it somewhere
+ else. Well; little saucy rogues, do not stay out too late to-night,
+ because it is Saturday night, and young women should come home soon then.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. I went to Court to seek a dinner: but the Queen was not at church, she
+ has got a touch of the gout; so the Court was thin, and I went to the
+ Coffee-house; and Sir Thomas Frankland and his eldest son and I went and
+ dined with his son William.(49) I talked a great deal to Sir Thomas about
+ Manley; and find he is his good friend, and so has Ned Southwell been, and
+ I hope he will be safe, though all the Irish folks here are his mortal
+ enemies. There was a devilish bite to-day. They had it, I know not how,
+ that I was to preach this morning at St. James's Church; an abundance
+ went, among the rest Lord Radnor, who never is abroad till three in the
+ afternoon. I walked all the way home from Hatton Garden at six, by
+ moonlight, a delicate night. Raymond called at nine, but I was denied; and
+ now I am in bed between eleven and twelve, just going to sleep, and dream
+ of my own dear roguish impudent pretty MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. You will now have short days' works, just a few lines to tell you
+ where I am, and what I am doing; only I will keep room for the last day to
+ tell you news, if there be any worth sending. I have been sometimes like
+ to do it at the top of my letter, until I remark it would be old before it
+ reached you. I was hunting to dine with Mr. Harley to-day, but could not
+ find him; and so I dined with honest Dr. Cockburn, and came home at six,
+ and was taken out to next door by Dopping and Ford, to drink bad claret
+ and oranges; and we let Raymond come to us, who talks of leaving the town
+ to-morrow, but I believe will stay a day or two longer. It is now late,
+ and I will say no more, but end this line with bidding my own dear saucy
+ MD goodnight, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. I am come down proud stomach in one instance, for I went to-day to see
+ the Duke of Buckingham,(50) but came too late: then I visited Mrs.
+ Barton,(51) and thought to have dined with some of the Ministry; but it
+ rained, and Mrs. Vanhomrigh was nigh, and I took the opportunity of paying
+ her for a scarf she bought me, and dined there; at four I went to
+ congratulate with Lord Shelburne, for the death of poor Lady Shelburne
+ dowager;(52) he was at his country house, and returned while I was there,
+ and had not heard of it, and he took it very well. I am now come home
+ before six, and find a packet from the Bishop of Clogher, with one
+ enclosed to the Duke of Ormond, which is ten days earlier dated than
+ another I had from Parvisol; however, 'tis no matter, for the Duke has
+ already disposed of the Vice-Chancellorship to the Archbishop of Tuam,(53)
+ and I could not help it, for it is a thing wholly you know in the Duke's
+ power; and I find the Bishop has enemies about the Duke. I write this
+ while Patrick is folding up my scarf, and doing up the fire (for I keep a
+ fire, it costs me twelvepence a week); and so be quiet till I am gone to
+ bed, and then sit down by me a little, and we will talk a few words more.
+ Well; now MD is at my bedside; and now what shall we say? How does Mrs.
+ Stoyte? What had the Dean for supper? How much did Mrs. Walls win? Poor
+ Lady Shelburne: well, go get you to bed, sirrahs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. Morning. I was up this morning early, and shaved by candlelight, and
+ write this by the fireside. Poor Raymond just came in and took his leave
+ of me; he is summoned by high order from his wife, but pretends he has had
+ enough of London. I was a little melancholy to part with him; he goes to
+ Bristol, where they are to be with his merchant brother, and now thinks of
+ staying till May; so she must be brought to bed in England. He was so easy
+ and manageable, that I almost repent I suffered him to see me so seldom.
+ But he is gone, and will save Patrick some lies in a week: Patrick is
+ grown admirable at it, and will make his fortune. How now, sirrah, must I
+ write in a morning to your impudence?
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Stay till night,
+ And then I'll write,
+ In black and white,
+ By candlelight,
+ Of wax so bright,
+ It helps the sight&mdash;
+ A bite, a bite!
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Marry come up, Mistress Boldface.&mdash;At night. Dr. Raymond came back,
+ and goes to-morrow. I did not come home till eleven, and found him here to
+ take leave of me. I went to the Court of Requests, thinking to find Mr.
+ Harley and dine with him, and refused Henley, and everybody, and at last
+ knew not where to go, and met Jemmy Leigh by chance, and he was just in
+ the same way, so I dined at his lodgings on a beef-steak, and drank your
+ health; then left him and went to the tavern with Ben Tooke and Portlack,
+ the Duke of Ormond's secretary, drinking nasty white wine till eleven. I
+ am sick, and ashamed of it, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21. I met that beast Ferris, Lord Berkeley's(54) steward formerly; I
+ walked with him a turn in the Park, and that scoundrel dog is as happy as
+ an emperor, has married a wife with a considerable estate in land and
+ houses about this town, and lives at his ease at Hammersmith. See your
+ confounded sect!(55) Well; I had the same luck to-day with Mr. Harley;
+ 'twas a lovely day, and went by water into the City, and dined with
+ Stratford at a merchant's house, and walked home with as great a dunce as
+ Ferris, I mean honest Colonel Caulfeild,(56) and came home by eight, and
+ now am in bed, and going to sleep for a wager, and will send this letter
+ on Saturday, and so; but first I will wish you a merry Christmas and a
+ happy New Year, and pray God we may never keep them asunder again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22. Morning. I am going now to Mr. Harley's levee on purpose to vex him; I
+ will say I had no other way of seeing him, etc. Patrick says it is a dark
+ morning, and that the Duke of Argyle(57) is to be knighted to-day; the
+ booby means installed at Windsor. But I must rise, for this is a
+ shaving-day, and Patrick says there is a good fire; I wish MD were by it,
+ or I by MD's.&mdash;At night. I forgot to tell you, Madam Dingley, that I
+ paid nine shillings for your glass and spectacles, of which three were for
+ the Bishop's case: I am sorry I did not buy you such another case; but if
+ you like it, I will bring one over with me; pray tell me: the glass to
+ read was four shillings, the spectacles two. And have you had your
+ chocolate? Leigh says he sent the petticoat by one Mr. Spencer. Pray have
+ you no further commissions for me? I paid the glass-man but last night,
+ and he would have made me a present of the microscope worth thirty
+ shillings, and would have sent it home along with me; I thought the deuce
+ was in the man: he said I could do him more service than that was worth,
+ etc. I refused his present, but promised him all service I could do him;
+ and so now I am obliged in honour to recommend him to everybody.&mdash;At
+ night. I went to Mr. Harley's levee; he came and asked me what I had to do
+ there, and bid me come and dine with him on a family dinner; which I did,
+ and it was the first time I ever saw his lady(58) and daughter;(59) at
+ five my Lord Keeper(60) came in: I told Mr. Harley, he had formerly
+ presented me to Sir Simon Harcourt, but now must to my Lord Keeper; so he
+ laughed, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23. Morning. This letter goes to-night without fail; I hope there is none
+ from you yet at the Coffee-house; I will send and see by and by, and let
+ you know, and so and so. Patrick goes to see for a letter: what will you
+ lay, is there one from MD or no? No, I say; done for sixpence. Why has the
+ Dean never once written to me? I won sixpence; I won sixpence; there is
+ not one letter to Presto. Good-morrow, dear sirrahs: Stratford and I dine
+ to-day with Lord Mountjoy. God Almighty preserve and bless you; farewell,
+ etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have been dining at Lord Mountjoy's; and am come to study; our news from
+ Spain this post takes off some of our fears. The Parliament is prorogued
+ to-day, or adjourned rather till after the holidays. Bank Stock is 105, so
+ I may get 12 shillings for my bargain already. Patrick, the puppy, is
+ abroad, and how shall I send this letter? Good-night, little dears both,
+ and be happy; and remember your poor Presto, that wants you sadly, as hope
+ saved. Let me go study, naughty girls, and don't keep me at the bottom of
+ the paper. O, faith, if you knew what lies on my hands constantly, you
+ would wonder to see how I could write such long letters; but we'll talk of
+ that some other time. Good-night again, and God bless dear MD with His
+ best blessings, yes, yes, and Dingley and Stella and me too, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ask the Bishop of Clogher about the pun I sent him of Lord Stawel's
+ brother;(61) it will be a pure bite. This letter has 199 lines in it,
+ beside all postscripts; I had a curiosity to reckon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is a long letter for you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is longer than a sermon, faith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had another letter from Mrs. Fenton, who says you were with her; I hope
+ you did not go on purpose. I will answer her letter soon; it is about some
+ money in Lady Giffard's hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They say you have had eight packets due to you; so pray, madams, do not
+ blame Presto, but the wind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My humble service to Mrs. Walls and Mrs. Stoyte; I missed the former a
+ good while.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0015" id="link2H_4_0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 12.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, Dec. 23, 1710.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I have sent my 11th to-night as usual, and begin the dozenth, and I told
+ you I dined with Stratford at Lord Mountjoy's, and I will tell you no more
+ at present, guess for why; because I am going to mind things, and mighty
+ affairs, not your nasty First-Fruits&mdash;I let them alone till Mr.
+ Harley gets the Queen's letter&mdash;but other things of greater moment,
+ that you shall know one day, when the ducks have eaten up all the dirt. So
+ sit still a while just by me, while I am studying, and don't say a word, I
+ charge you, and when I am going to bed, I will take you along, and talk
+ with you a little while, so there, sit there.&mdash;Come then, let us see
+ what we have to say to these saucy brats, that will not let us go sleep at
+ past eleven. Why, I am a little impatient to know how you do; but that I
+ take it for a standing maxim, that when you are silent, all is pretty
+ well, because that is the way I will deal with you; and if there was
+ anything you ought to know now, I would write by the first post, although
+ I had written but the day before. Remember this, young women; and God
+ Almighty preserve you both, and make us happy together; and tell me how
+ accompts stand between us, that you may be paid long before it is due, not
+ to want. I will return no more money while I stay, so that you need not be
+ in pain to be paid; but let me know at least a month before you can want.
+ Observe this, d'ye hear, little dear sirrahs, and love Presto, as Presto
+ loves MD, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24. You will have a merrier Christmas Eve than we here. I went up to Court
+ before church; and in one of the rooms, there being but little company, a
+ fellow in a red coat without a sword came up to me, and, after words of
+ course, asked me how the ladies did? I asked, "What ladies?" He said,
+ "Mrs. Dingley and Mrs. Johnson." "Very well," said I, "when I heard from
+ them last: and pray when came you from thence, sir?" He said, "I never was
+ in Ireland"; and just at that word Lord Winchelsea(1) comes up to me, and
+ the man went off: as I went out I saw him again, and recollected him, it
+ was Vedeau(2) with a pox: I then went and made my apologies, that my head
+ was full of something I had to say to Lord Winchelsea, etc., and I asked
+ after his wife, and so all was well; and he inquired after my lodging,
+ because he had some favour to desire of me in Ireland, to recommend
+ somebody to somebody, I know not what it is. When I came from church, I
+ went up to Court again, where Sir Edmond Bacon(3) told me the bad news
+ from Spain,(4) which you will hear before this reaches you; as we have it
+ now, we are undone there, and it was odd to see the whole countenances of
+ the Court changed so in two hours. Lady Mountjoy(5) carried me home to
+ dinner, where I stayed not long after, and came home early, and now am got
+ into bed, for you must always write to your MD's in bed, that is a maxim.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Mr. White and Mr. Red,
+ Write to MD when abed;
+ Mr. Black and Mr. Brown,
+ Write to MD when you're down;
+ Mr. Oak and Mr. Willow,
+ Write to MD on your pillow.&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ What is this? faith, I smell fire; what can it be? this house has a
+ thousand stinks in it. I think to leave it on Thursday, and lodge over the
+ way. Faith, I must rise, and look at my chimney, for the smell grows
+ stronger, stay&mdash;I have been up, and in my room, and found all safe,
+ only a mouse within the fender to warm himself, which I could not catch. I
+ smelt nothing there, but now in my bed-chamber I smell it again; I believe
+ I have singed the woollen curtain, and that is all, though I cannot smoke
+ it. Presto is plaguy silly to-night, an't he? Yes, and so he be. Ay, but
+ if I should wake and see fire. Well; I will venture; so good-night, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25. Pray, young women, if I write so much as this every day, how will this
+ paper hold a fortnight's work, and answer one of yours into the bargain?
+ You never think of this, but let me go on like a simpleton. I wish you a
+ merry Christmas, and many, many a one with poor Presto at some pretty
+ place. I was at church to-day by eight, and received the Sacrament, and
+ came home by ten; then went to Court at two: it was a Collar-day, that is,
+ when the Knights of the Garter wear their collars; but the Queen stayed so
+ late at Sacrament, that I came back, and dined with my neighbour Ford,
+ because all people dine at home on this day. This is likewise a Collar-day
+ all over England in every house, at least where there is BRAWN: that's
+ very well.&mdash;I tell you a good pun; a fellow hard by pretends to cure
+ agues, and has set out a sign, and spells it EGOES; a gentleman and I
+ observing it, he said, "How does that fellow pretend to cure AGUES?" I
+ said I did not know; but I was sure it was not by a SPELL. That is
+ admirable. And so you asked the Bishop about that pun of Lord Stawel's
+ brother. Bite! Have I caught you, young women? Must you pretend to ask
+ after roguish puns, and Latin ones too? Oh but you smoked me, and did not
+ ask the Bishop. Oh but you are a fool, and you did. I met Vedeau again at
+ Court to-day, and I observed he had a sword on; I fancy he was broke, and
+ has got a commission, but I never asked him. Vedeau I think his name is,
+ yet Parvisol's man is Vedel, that is true. Bank Stock will fall like
+ stock-fish by this bad news, and two days ago I could have got twelve
+ pounds by my bargain; but I do not intend to sell, and in time it will
+ rise. It is odd that my Lord Peterborow foretold this loss two months ago,
+ one night at Mr. Harley's, when I was there; he bid us count upon it, that
+ Stanhope would lose Spain before Christmas; that he would venture his head
+ upon it, and gave us reasons; and though Mr. Harley argued the contrary,
+ he still held to his opinion. I was telling my Lord Angelsea this at Court
+ this morning; and a gentleman by said he had heard my Lord Peterborow
+ affirm the same thing. I have heard wise folks say, "An ill tongue may do
+ much." And 'tis an odd saying,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Once I guessed right,
+ And I got credit by't;
+ Thrice I guessed wrong,
+ And I kept my credit on."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ No, it is you are sorry, not I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26. By the Lord Harry, I shall be undone here with Christmas boxes. The
+ rogues of the Coffee-house have raised their tax, everyone giving a crown;
+ and I gave mine for shame, besides a great many half-crowns to great men's
+ porters, etc. I went to-day by water into the city, and dined with no less
+ a man than the City Printer.(6) There is an intimacy between us, built
+ upon reasons that you shall know when I see you; but the rain caught me
+ within twelvepenny length of home. I called at Mr. Harley's, who was not
+ within, dropped my half-crown with his porter, drove to the Coffee-house,
+ where the rain kept me till nine. I had letters to-day from the Archbishop
+ of Dublin and Mr. Bernage;(7) the latter sends me a melancholy account of
+ Lady Shelburne's(8) death, and his own disappointments, and would gladly
+ be a captain; if I can help him, I will.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27. Morning. I bespoke a lodging over the way for tomorrow, and the dog
+ let it yesterday to another; I gave him no earnest, so it seems he could
+ do it; Patrick would have had me give him earnest to bind him; but I would
+ not. So I must go saunter to-day for a lodging somewhere else. Did you
+ ever see so open a winter in England? We have not had two frosty days; but
+ it pays it off in rain: we have not had three fair days these six weeks.
+ O, faith, I dreamt mightily of MD last night; but so confused, I cannot
+ tell a word. I have made Ford acquainted with Lewis; and to-day we dined
+ together: in the evening I called at one or two neighbours, hoping to
+ spend a Christmas evening; but none were at home, they were all gone to be
+ merry with others. I have often observed this, that in merry times
+ everybody is abroad; where the deuce are they? So I went to the
+ Coffee-house, and talked with Mr. Addison an hour, who at last remembered
+ to give me two letters, which I cannot answer to-night, nor to-morrow
+ neither, I can assure you, young women, count upon that. I have other
+ things to do than to answer naughty girls, an old saying and true,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Letters from MD's
+ Must not be answered in ten days:
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ it is but bad rhyme, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28. To-day I had a message from Sir Thomas Hanmer, to dine with him; the
+ famous Dr. Smalridge(9) was of the company, and we sat till six; and I
+ came home to my new lodgings in St. Albans Street,(10) where I pay the
+ same rent (eight shillings a week) for an apartment two pair of stairs;
+ but I have the use of the parlour to receive persons of quality, and I am
+ got into my new bed, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29. Sir Andrew Fountaine has been very ill this week; and sent to me early
+ this morning to have prayers, which you know is the last thing. I found
+ the doctors and all in despair about him. I read prayers to him, found he
+ had settled all things; and, when I came out, the nurse asked me whether I
+ thought it possible he could live; for the doctors thought not. I said, I
+ believed he would live; for I found the seeds of life in him, which I
+ observe seldom fail (and I found them in poor, dearest Stella, when she
+ was ill many years ago); and to-night I was with him again, and he was
+ mightily recovered, and I hope he will do well, and the doctor approved my
+ reasons; but, if he should die, I should come off scurvily. The Secretary
+ of State (Mr. St. John) sent to me to dine with him; Mr. Harley and Lord
+ Peterborow dined there too; and at night came Lord Rivers. Lord Peterborow
+ goes to Vienna in a day or two: he has promised to make me write to him.
+ Mr. Harley went away at six; but we stayed till seven. I took the
+ Secretary aside, and complained to him of Mr. Harley, that he had got the
+ Queen to grant the First-Fruits, promised to bring me to her, and get her
+ letter to the bishops of Ireland; but the last part he had not done in six
+ weeks, and I was in danger to lose reputation, etc. He took the matter
+ right, desired me to be with him on Sunday morning, and promises me to
+ finish the affair in four days; so I shall know in a little time what I
+ have to trust to.&mdash;It is nine o'clock, and I must go study, you
+ little rogues; and so good-night, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30. Morning. The weather grows cold, you sauceboxes. Sir Andrew Fountaine,
+ they bring me word, is better. I will go rise, for my hands are starving
+ while I write in bed. Night. Now Sir Andrew Fountaine is recovering, he
+ desires to be at ease; for I called in the morning to read prayers, but he
+ had given orders not to be disturbed. I have lost a legacy by his living;
+ for he told me he had left me a picture and some books, etc. I called to
+ see my quondam neighbour Ford (do you know what quondam is, though?), and
+ he engaged me to dine with him; for he always dines at home on Opera-days.
+ I came home at six, writ to the Archbishop, then studied till past eleven,
+ and stole to bed, to write to MD these few lines, to let you know I am in
+ good health at the present writing hereof, and hope in God MD is so too. I
+ wonder I never write politics to you: I could make you the profoundest
+ politician in all the lane.&mdash;Well, but when shall we answer this
+ letter, No. 8 of MD's? Not till next year, faith. O Lord&mdash;bo&mdash;but
+ that will be a Monday next. Cod's-so, is it? and so it is: never saw the
+ like.&mdash;I made a pun t'other day to Ben Portlack(11) about a pair of
+ drawers. Poh, said he, that's mine a&mdash;- all over. Pray, pray,
+ Dingley, let me go sleep; pray, pray, Stella, let me go slumber; and put
+ out my wax-candle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 31. Morning. It is now seven, and I have got a fire, but am writing abed
+ in my bed-chamber. 'Tis not shaving-day, so I shall be ready early to go
+ before church to Mr. St. John; and to-morrow I will answer our MD's
+ letter.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Would you answer MD's letter,
+ On New Year's Day you'll do it better;
+ For, when the year with MD 'gins,
+ It without MD never lins.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ (These proverbs have always old words in them; lins is leave off.)
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ But, if on New Year you write nones,
+ MD then will bang your bones.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ But Patrick says I must rise.&mdash;Night. I was early this morning with
+ Secretary St. John, and gave him a memorial to get the Queen's letter for
+ the First-Fruits, who has promised to do it in a very few days. He told me
+ he had been with the Duke of Marlborough, who was lamenting his former
+ wrong steps in joining with the Whigs, and said he was worn out with age,
+ fatigues, and misfortunes. I swear it pitied me; and I really think they
+ will not do well in too much mortifying that man, although indeed it is
+ his own fault. He is covetous as hell, and ambitious as the Prince of it:
+ he would fain have been General for life, and has broken all endeavours
+ for peace, to keep his greatness and get money. He told the Queen he was
+ neither covetous nor ambitious. She said if she could have conveniently
+ turned about, she would have laughed, and could hardly forbear it in his
+ face. He fell in with all the abominable measures of the late Ministry,
+ because they gratified him for their own designs. Yet he has been a
+ successful General, and I hope he will continue his command. O Lord, smoke
+ the politics to MD! Well; but, if you like them, I will scatter a little
+ now and then, and mine are all fresh from the chief hands. Well, I dined
+ with Mr. Harley, and came away at six: there was much company, and I was
+ not merry at all. Mr. Harley made me read a paper of verses of Prior's. I
+ read them plain, without any fine manner; and Prior swore, I should never
+ read any of his again; but he would be revenged, and read some of mine as
+ bad. I excused myself, and said I was famous for reading verses the worst
+ in the world; and that everybody snatched them from me when I offered to
+ begin. So we laughed.&mdash;Sir Andrew Fountaine still continues ill. He
+ is plagued with some sort of bile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jan. 1. Morning. I wish my dearest, pretty Dingley and Stella a happy New
+ Year, and health, and mirth, and good stomachs, and Fr's company. Faith, I
+ did not know how to write Fr. I wondered what was the matter; but now I
+ remember I always write Pdfr. Patrick wishes me a happy New Year, and
+ desires I would rise, for it is a good fire, and faith 'tis cold. I was so
+ politic last night with MD, never saw the like. Get the Examiners, and
+ read them; the last nine or ten are full of the reasons for the late
+ change, and of the abuses of the last Ministry; and the great men assure
+ me they are all true. They are written by their encouragement and
+ direction. I must rise and go see Sir Andrew Fountaine; but perhaps
+ to-night I may answer MD's letter: so good-morrow, my mistresses all,
+ good-morrow.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ I wish you both a merry New Year,
+ Roast beef, minced pies, and good strong beer,
+ And me a share of your good cheer,
+ That I was there, or you were here;
+ And you're a little saucy dear.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Good-morrow again, dear sirrahs; one cannot rise for your play.&mdash;At
+ night. I went this morning to visit Lady Kerry and Lord Shelburne; and
+ they made me dine with them. Sir Andrew Fountaine is better. And now let
+ us come and see what this saucy, dear letter of MD says. Come out, letter,
+ come out from between the sheets; here it is underneath, and it will not
+ come out. Come out again, I say: so there. Here it is. What says Presto to
+ me, pray? says it. Come, and let me answer for you to your ladies. Hold up
+ your head then, like a good letter. There. Pray, how have you got up with
+ Presto, Madam Stella? You write your eighth when you receive mine: now I
+ write my twelfth when I receive your eighth. Do not you allow for what are
+ upon the road, simpleton? What say you to that? And so you kept Presto's
+ little birthday, I warrant: would to God I had been at the health rather
+ than here, where I have no manner of pleasure, nothing but eternal
+ business upon my hands. I shall grow wise in time; but no more of that:
+ only I say Amen with my heart and vitals, that we may never be asunder
+ again ten days together while poor Presto lives.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ I can't be merry so near any splenetic talk; so I made that long line, and
+ now all's well again. Yes, you are a pretending slut, indeed, with your
+ fourth and fifth in the margin, and your journal, and everything. Wind&mdash;we
+ saw no wind here, nothing at all extraordinary at any time. We had it once
+ when you had it not. But an old saying and a true:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "I hate all wind,
+ Before and behind,
+ From cheeks with eyes,
+ Or from blind.&mdash;&mdash;"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Your chimney fall down! God preserve you. I suppose you only mean a brick
+ or two: but that's a d&mdash;ned lie of your chimney being carried to the
+ next house with the wind. Don't put such things upon us; those matters
+ will not pass here: keep a little to possibilities. My Lord Hertford(12)
+ would have been ashamed of such a stretch. You should take care of what
+ company you converse with: when one gets that faculty, 'tis hard to break
+ one's self of it. Jemmy Leigh talks of going over; but quando? I do not
+ know when he will go. Oh, now you have had my ninth, now you are come up
+ with me; marry come up with you, indeed. I know all that business of Lady
+ S&mdash;&mdash;.(13) Will nobody cut that D&mdash;y's throat? Five hundred
+ pounds do you call poor pay for living three months the life of a king?
+ They say she died with grief, partly, being forced to appear as a witness
+ in court about some squabble among their servants.&mdash;The Bishop of
+ Clogher showed you a pamphlet.(14) Well, but you must not give your mind
+ to believe those things; people will say anything. The Character is here
+ reckoned admirable, but most of the facts are trifles. It was first
+ printed privately here; and then some bold cur ventured to do it publicly,
+ and sold two thousand in two days: who the author is must remain
+ uncertain. Do you pretend to know, impudence? How durst you think so? Pox
+ on your Parliaments: the Archbishop has told me of it; but we do not
+ vouchsafe to know anything of it here. No, no, no more of your giddiness
+ yet; thank you, Stella, for asking after it; thank you; God Almighty bless
+ you for your kindness to poor Presto. You write to Lady Giffard and your
+ mother upon what I advise when it is too late. But yet I fancy this bad
+ news will bring down stocks so low, that one might buy to great advantage.
+ I design to venture going to see your mother some day when Lady Giffard is
+ abroad. Well, keep your Rathburn(15) and stuff. I thought he was to pay in
+ your money upon his houses to be flung down about the what do you call it.&mdash;Well,
+ Madam Dingley, I sent your enclosed to Bristol, but have not heard from
+ Raymond since he went. Come, come, young women, I keep a good fire; it
+ costs me twelvepence a week, and I fear something more; vex me, and I will
+ have one in my bed-chamber too. No, did not I tell you but just now, we
+ have no high winds here? Have you forgot already?&mdash;Now you're at it
+ again, silly Stella; why does your mother say my candles are scandalous?
+ They are good sixes in the pound, and she said I was extravagant enough to
+ burn them by daylight. I never burn fewer at a time than one. What would
+ people have? The D&mdash;&mdash; burst Hawkshaw. He told me he had not the
+ box; and the next day Sterne told me he had sent it a fortnight ago.
+ Patrick could not find him t'other day, but he shall to-morrow. Dear life
+ and heart, do you tease me? does Stella tease Presto? That palsy-water was
+ in the box; it was too big for a packet, and I was afraid of its breaking.
+ Leigh was not in town then; or I would not have trusted it to Sterne, whom
+ yet I have befriended enough to do me more kindness than that. I'll never
+ rest till you have it, or till it is in a way for you to have it. Poor
+ dear rogue, naughty to think it teases me; how could I ever forgive myself
+ for neglecting anything that related to your health? Sure I were a Devil
+ if I did.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ See how far I am forced to stand from Stella, because I am afraid she
+ thinks poor Presto has not been careful about her little things; I am sure
+ I bought them immediately according to order, and packed them up with my
+ own hands, and sent them to Sterne, and was six times with him about
+ sending them away. I am glad you are pleased with your glasses. I have got
+ another velvet cap; a new one Lord Herbert(16) bought and presented me one
+ morning I was at breakfast with him, where he was as merry and easy as
+ ever I saw him, yet had received a challenge half an hour before, and half
+ an hour after fought a duel. It was about ten days ago. You are mistaken
+ in your guesses about Tatlers: I did neither write that on Noses nor
+ Religion,(17) nor do I send him of late any hints at all.&mdash;Indeed,
+ Stella, when I read your letter, I was not uneasy at all; but when I came
+ to answer the particulars, and found that you had not received your box,
+ it grated me to the heart, because I thought, through your little words,
+ that you imagined I had not taken the care I ought. But there has been
+ some blunder in this matter, which I will know to-morrow, and write to
+ Sterne, for fear he should not be within.&mdash;And pray, pray, Presto,
+ pray now do.&mdash;No, Raymond was not above four times with me while he
+ stayed, and then only while I was dressing. Mrs. Fenton has written me
+ another letter about some money of hers in Lady Giffard's hands, that is
+ entrusted to me by my mother, not to come to her husband. I send my
+ letters constantly every fortnight, and, if you will have them oftener,
+ you may, but then they will be the shorter. Pray, let Parvisol sell the
+ horse. I think I spoke to you of it in a former letter: I am glad you are
+ rid of him, and was in pain while I thought you rode him; but, if he would
+ buy you another, or anybody else, and that you could be often able to
+ ride, why do not you do it?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. I went this morning early to the Secretary of State, Mr. St. John; and
+ he told me from Mr. Harley that the warrant was now drawn, in order for a
+ patent for the First-Fruits: it must pass through several offices, and
+ take up some time, because in things the Queen gives they are always
+ considerate; but that, he assures me, 'tis granted and done, and past all
+ dispute, and desires I will not be in any pain at all. I will write again
+ to the Archbishop to-morrow, and tell him this, and I desire you will say
+ it on occasion. From the Secretary I went to Mr. Sterne, who said he would
+ write to you to-night; and that the box must be at Chester; and that some
+ friend of his goes very soon, and will carry it over. I dined with Mr.
+ Secretary St. John, and at six went to Darteneufs house to drink punch
+ with him, and Mr. Addison, and little Harrison,(18) a young poet, whose
+ fortune I am making. Steele was to have been there, but came not, nor
+ never did twice, since I knew him, to any appointment. I stayed till past
+ eleven, and am now in bed. Steele's last Tatler came out to-day. You will
+ see it before this comes to you, and how he takes leave of the world. He
+ never told so much as Mr. Addison of it, who was surprised as much as I;
+ but, to say the truth, it was time, for he grew cruel dull and dry. To my
+ knowledge he had several good hints to go upon; but he was so lazy and
+ weary of the work that he would not improve them. I think I will send this
+ after(19) to-morrow: shall I before 'tis full, Dingley?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. Lord Peterborow yesterday called me into a barber's shop, and there we
+ talked deep politics: he desired me to dine with him to-day at the Globe
+ in the Strand; he said he would show me so clearly how to get Spain, that
+ I could not possibly doubt it. I went to-day accordingly, and saw him
+ among half a dozen lawyers and attorneys and hang-dogs, signing of deeds
+ and stuff before his journey; for he goes to-morrow to Vienna. I sat among
+ that scurvy company till after four, but heard nothing of Spain; only I
+ find, by what he told me before, that he fears he shall do no good in his
+ present journey.(20) We are to be mighty constant correspondents. So I
+ took my leave of him, and called at Sir Andrew Fountaine's, who mends
+ much. I came home, an't please you, at six, and have been studying till
+ now past eleven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. Morning. Morrow, little dears. O, faith, I have been dreaming; I was to
+ be put in prison. I do not know why, and I was so afraid of a black
+ dungeon; and then all I had been inquiring yesterday of Sir Andrew
+ Fountaine's sickness I thought was of poor Stella. The worst of dreams is,
+ that one wakes just in the humour they leave one. Shall I send this
+ to-day? With all my heart: it is two days within the fortnight; but may be
+ MD are in haste to have a round dozen: and then how are you come up to me
+ with your eighth, young women? But you indeed ought to write twice slower
+ than I, because there are two of you; I own that. Well then, I will seal
+ up this letter by my morning candle, and carry it into the city with me,
+ where I go to dine, and put it into the post-office with my own fair
+ hands. So, let me see whether I have any news to tell MD. They say they
+ will very soon make some inquiries into the corruptions of the late
+ Ministry; and they must do it, to justify their turning them out.
+ Atterbury,(21) we think, is to be Dean of Christ Church in Oxford; but the
+ College would rather have Smalridge&mdash;What's all this to you? What
+ care you for Atterburys and Smalridges? No, you care for nothing but
+ Presto, faith. So I will rise, and bid you farewell; yet I am loth to do
+ so, because there is a great bit of paper yet to talk upon; but Dingley
+ will have it so: "Yes," says she, "make your journals shorter, and send
+ them oftener;" and so I will. And I have cheated you another way too; for
+ this is clipped paper, and holds at least six lines less than the former
+ ones. I will tell you a good thing I said to my Lord Carteret.(22) "So,"
+ says he, "my Lord came up to me, and asked me," etc. "No," said I, "my
+ Lord never did, nor ever can come up to you." We all pun here sometimes.
+ Lord Carteret set down Prior t'other day in his chariot; and Prior thanked
+ him for his CHARITY; that was fit for Dilly.(23) I do not remember I heard
+ one good one from the Ministry; which is really a shame. Henley is gone to
+ the country for Christmas. The puppy comes here without his wife,(24) and
+ keeps no house, and would have me dine with him at eating-houses; but I
+ have only done it once, and will do it no more. He had not seen me for
+ some time in the Coffee-house, and asking after me, desired Lord Herbert
+ to tell me I was a beast for ever, after the order of Melchisedec. Did you
+ ever read the Scripture?(25) It is only changing the word priest to beast.&mdash;I
+ think I am bewitched, to write so much in a morning to you, little MD. Let
+ me go, will you? and I'll come again to-night in a fine clean sheet of
+ paper; but I can nor will stay no longer now; no, I won't, for all your
+ wheedling: no, no, look off, do not smile at me, and say, "Pray, pray,
+ Presto, write a little more." Ah! you are a wheedling slut, you be so.
+ Nay, but prithee turn about, and let me go, do; 'tis a good girl, and do.
+ O, faith, my morning candle is just out, and I must go now in spite of my
+ teeth; for my bed-chamber is dark with curtains, and I am at the wrong
+ side. So farewell, etc. etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am in the dark almost: I must have another candle, when I am up, to seal
+ this; but I will fold it up in the dark, and make what you can of this,
+ for I can only see this paper I am writing upon. Service to Mrs. Walls and
+ Mrs. Stoyte.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ God Almighty bless you, etc. What I am doing I can't see; but I will fold
+ it up, and not look on it again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0016" id="link2H_4_0016">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 13.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, Jan. 4, 1710-11.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I was going into the City (where I dined and put my 12th, with my own fair
+ hands, into the post-office as I came back, which was not till nine this
+ night). I dined with people that you never heard of, nor is it worth your
+ while to know; an authoress and a printer.(1) I walked home for exercise,
+ and at eleven got to bed; and, all the while I was undressing myself,
+ there was I speaking monkey things in air, just as if MD had been by, and
+ did not recollect myself till I got into bed. I writ last night to the
+ Archbishop, and told him the warrant was drawn for the First-Fruits; and I
+ told him Lord Peterborow was set out for his journey to Vienna; but it
+ seems the Lords have addressed to have him stay, to be examined about
+ Spanish affairs, upon this defeat there, and to know where the fault lay,
+ etc. So I writ to the Archbishop a lie; but I think it was not a sin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. Mr. Secretary St. John sent for me this morning so early, that I was
+ forced to go without shaving, which put me quite out of method. I called
+ at Mr. Ford's, and desired him to lend me a shaving; and so made a shift
+ to get into order again. Lord! here is an impertinence: Sir Andrew
+ Fountaine's mother and sister(2) are come above a hundred miles, from
+ Worcester, to see him before he died. They got here but yesterday; and he
+ must have been past hopes, or past fears, before they could reach him. I
+ fell a scolding when I heard they were coming; and the people about him
+ wondered at me, and said what a mighty content it would be on both sides
+ to die when they were with him! I knew the mother; she is the greatest
+ Overdo(3) upon earth; and the sister, they say, is worse; the poor man
+ will relapse again among them. Here was the scoundrel brother always
+ crying in the outer room till Sir Andrew was in danger; and the dog was to
+ have all his estate if he died; and it is an ignorant, worthless,
+ scoundrel-rake: and the nurses were comforting him, and desiring he would
+ not take on so. I dined to-day the first time with Ophy Butler(4) and his
+ wife; and you supped with the Dean, and lost two-and-twenty pence at
+ cards. And so Mrs. Walls is brought to bed of a girl, who died two days
+ after it was christened; and, betwixt you and me, she is not very sorry:
+ she loves her ease and diversions too well to be troubled with children. I
+ will go to bed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. Morning. I went last night to put some coals on my fire after Patrick
+ was gone to bed; and there I saw in a closet a poor linnet he has bought
+ to bring over to Dingley: it cost him sixpence, and is as tame as a
+ dormouse. I believe he does not know he is a bird: where you put him,
+ there he stands, and seems to have neither hope nor fear; I suppose in a
+ week he will die of the spleen. Patrick advised with me before he bought
+ him. I laid fairly before him the greatness of the sum, and the rashness
+ of the attempt; showed how impossible it was to carry him safe over the
+ salt sea: but he would not take my counsel; and he will repent it. 'Tis
+ very cold this morning in bed; and I hear there is a good fire in the room
+ without (what do you call it?), the dining-room. I hope it will be good
+ weather, and so let me rise, sirrahs, do so.&mdash;At night. I was this
+ morning to visit the Dean,(5) or Mr. Prolocutor, I think you call him,
+ don't you? Why should not I go to the Dean's as well as you? A little,
+ black man, of pretty near fifty? Ay, the same. A good, pleasant man? Ay,
+ the same. Cunning enough? Yes. One that understands his own interests? As
+ well as anybody. How comes it MD and I don't meet there sometimes? A very
+ good face, and abundance of wit? Do you know his lady? O Lord! whom do you
+ mean?(6) I mean Dr. Atterbury, Dean of Carlisle and Prolocutor. Pshaw,
+ Presto, you are a fool: I thought you had meant our Dean of St. Patrick's.&mdash;Silly,
+ silly, silly, you are silly, both are silly, every kind of thing is silly.
+ As I walked into the city I was stopped with clusters of boys and wenches
+ buzzing about the cake-shops like flies.(7) There had the fools let out
+ their shops two yards forward into the streets, all spread with great
+ cakes frothed with sugar, and stuck with streamers of tinsel. And then I
+ went to Bateman's the bookseller, and laid out eight-and-forty shillings
+ for books. I bought three little volumes of Lucian in French for our
+ Stella, and so and so. Then I went to Garraway's(8) to meet Stratford and
+ dine with him; but it was an idle day with the merchants, and he was gone
+ to our end of the town: so I dined with Sir Thomas Frankland at the Post
+ Office, and we drank your Manley's health. It was in a newspaper that he
+ was turned out; but Secretary St. John told me it was false: only that
+ newswriter is a plaguy Tory. I have not seen one bit of Christmas
+ merriment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. Morning. Your new Lord Chancellor(9) sets out to-morrow for Ireland: I
+ never saw him. He carries over one Trapp(10) a parson as his chaplain, a
+ sort of pretender to wit, a second-rate pamphleteer for the cause, whom
+ they pay by sending him to Ireland. I never saw Trapp neither. I met
+ Tighe(11) and your Smyth of Lovet's yesterday by the Exchange. Tighe and I
+ took no notice of each other; but I stopped Smyth, and told him of the box
+ that lies for you at Chester, because he says he goes very soon to
+ Ireland, I think this week: and I will send this morning to Sterne, to
+ take measures with Smyth; so good-morrow, sirrahs, and let me rise, pray.
+ I took up this paper when I came in at evening, I mean this minute, and
+ then said I, "No, no, indeed, MD, you must stay"; and then was laying it
+ aside, but could not for my heart, though I am very busy, till I just ask
+ you how you do since morning; by and by we shall talk more, so let me
+ leave you: softly down, little paper, till then; so there&mdash;now to
+ business; there, I say, get you gone; no, I will not push you neither, but
+ hand you on one side&mdash;So&mdash;Now I am got into bed, I'll talk with
+ you. Mr. Secretary St. John sent for me this morning in all haste; but I
+ would not lose my shaving, for fear of missing church. I went to Court,
+ which is of late always very full; and young Manley and I dined at Sir
+ Matthew Dudley's.&mdash;I must talk politics. I protest I am afraid we
+ shall all be embroiled with parties. The Whigs, now they are fallen, are
+ the most malicious toads in the world. We have had now a second
+ misfortune, the loss of several Virginia ships. I fear people will begin
+ to think that nothing thrives under this Ministry: and if the Ministry can
+ once be rendered odious to the people, the Parliament may be chosen Whig
+ or Tory as the Queen pleases. Then I think our friends press a little too
+ hard on the Duke of Marlborough. The country members(12) are violent to
+ have past faults inquired into, and they have reason; but I do not observe
+ the Ministry to be very fond of it. In my opinion we have nothing to save
+ us but a Peace; and I am sure we cannot have such a one as we hoped; and
+ then the Whigs will bawl what they would have done had they continued in
+ power. I tell the Ministry this as much as I dare; and shall venture to
+ say a little more to them, especially about the Duke of Marlborough, who,
+ as the Whigs give out, will lay down his command; and I question whether
+ ever any wise State laid aside a general who had been successful nine
+ years together, whom the enemy so much dread, and his own soldiers cannot
+ but believe must always conquer; and you know that in war opinion is nine
+ parts in ten. The Ministry hear me always with appearance of regard, and
+ much kindness; but I doubt they let personal quarrels mingle too much with
+ their proceedings. Meantime, they seem to value all this as nothing, and
+ are as easy and merry as if they had nothing in their hearts or upon their
+ shoulders; like physicians, who endeavour to cure, but feel no grief,
+ whatever the patient suffers.&mdash;Pshaw, what is all this? Do you know
+ one thing, that I find I can write politics to you much easier than to
+ anybody alive? But I swear my head is full; and I wish I were at Laracor,
+ with dear, charming MD, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. Morning. Methinks, young women, I have made a great progress in four
+ days, at the bottom of this side already, and no letter yet come from MD
+ (that word interlined is morning). I find I have been writing State
+ affairs to MD. How do they relish it? Why, anything that comes from Presto
+ is welcome; though really, to confess the truth, if they had their choice,
+ not to disguise the matter, they had rather, etc. Now, Presto, I must tell
+ you, you grow silly, says Stella. That is but one body's opinion, madam. I
+ promised to be with Mr. Secretary St. John this morning; but I am lazy,
+ and will not go, because I had a letter from him yesterday, to desire I
+ would dine there to-day. I shall be chid; but what care I?&mdash;Here has
+ been Mrs. South with me, just come from Sir Andrew Fountaine, and going to
+ market. He is still in a fever, and may live or die. His mother and sister
+ are now come up, and in the house; so there is a lurry.(13) I gave Mrs.
+ South half a pistole for a New Year's gift. So good-morrow, dears both,
+ till anon.&mdash;At night. Lord! I have been with Mr. Secretary from
+ dinner till eight; and, though I drank wine and water, I am so hot! Lady
+ Stanley(14) came to visit Mrs. St. John,(15) and sent up for me to make up
+ a quarrel with Mrs. St. John, whom I never yet saw; and do you think that
+ devil of a Secretary would let me go, but kept me by main force, though I
+ told him I was in love with his lady, and it was a shame to keep back a
+ lover, etc.? But all would not do; so at last I was forced to break away,
+ but never went up, it was then too late; and here I am, and have a great
+ deal to do to-night, though it be nine o'clock; but one must say something
+ to these naughty MD's, else there will be no quiet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. To-day Ford and I set apart to go into the City to buy books; but we
+ only had a scurvy dinner at an alehouse; and he made me go to the tavern
+ and drink Florence, four and sixpence a flask; damned wine! so I spent my
+ money, which I seldom do, and passed an insipid day, and saw nobody, and
+ it is now ten o'clock, and I have nothing to say, but that 'tis a
+ fortnight to-morrow since I had a letter from MD; but if I have it time
+ enough to answer here, 'tis well enough, otherwise woe betide you, faith.
+ I will go to the toyman's, here just in Pall Mall, and he sells great
+ hugeous battoons;(16) yes, faith, and so he does. Does not he, Dingley?
+ Yes, faith. Don't lose your money this Christmas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. I must go this morning to Mr. Secretary St. John. I promised
+ yesterday, but failed, so can't write any more till night to poor, dear
+ MD.&mdash;At night. O, faith, Dingley. I had company in the morning, and
+ could not go where I designed; and I had a basket from Raymond at Bristol,
+ with six bottles of wine and a pound of chocolate, and some tobacco to
+ snuff; and he writ under, the carriage was paid; but he lied, or I am
+ cheated, or there is a mistake; and he has written to me so confusedly
+ about some things, that Lucifer could not understand him. This wine is to
+ be drunk with Harley's brother(17) and Sir Robert Raymond,
+ Solicitor-General, in order to recommend the Doctor to your new Lord
+ Chancellor, who left this place on Monday; and Raymond says he is hasting
+ to Chester, to go with him.&mdash;I suppose he leaves his wife behind; for
+ when he left London he had no thoughts of stirring till summer. So I
+ suppose he will be with you before this. Ford came and desired I would
+ dine with him, because it was Opera-day; which I did, and sent excuses to
+ Lord Shelburne, who had invited me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. I am setting up a new Tatler, little Harrison,(18) whom I have
+ mentioned to you. Others have put him on it, and I encourage him; and he
+ was with me this morning and evening, showing me his first, which comes
+ out on Saturday. I doubt he will not succeed, for I do not much approve
+ his manner; but the scheme is Mr. Secretary St. John's and mine, and would
+ have done well enough in good hands. I recommended him to a printer,(19)
+ whom I sent for, and settled the matter between them this evening.
+ Harrison has just left me, and I am tired with correcting his trash.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. I was this morning upon some business with Mr. Secretary St. John, and
+ he made me promise to dine with him; which otherwise I would have done
+ with Mr. Harley, whom I have not been with these ten days. I cannot but
+ think they have mighty difficulties upon them; yet I always find them as
+ easy and disengaged as schoolboys on a holiday. Harley has the procuring
+ of five or six millions on his shoulders, and the Whigs will not lend a
+ groat;(20) which is the only reason of the fall of stocks: for they are
+ like Quakers and fanatics, that will only deal among themselves, while all
+ others deal indifferently with them. Lady Marlborough offers, if they will
+ let her keep her employments, never to come into the Queen's presence. The
+ Whigs say the Duke of Marlborough will serve no more; but I hope and think
+ otherwise. I would to Heaven I were this minute with MD at Dublin; for I
+ am weary of politics, that give me such melancholy prospects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. O, faith, I had an ugly giddy fit last night in my chamber, and I have
+ got a new box of pills to take, and hope I shall have no more this good
+ while. I would not tell you before, because it would vex you, little
+ rogues; but now it is over. I dined to-day with Lord Shelburne; and to-day
+ little Harrison's new Tatler came out: there is not much in it, but I hope
+ he will mend. You must understand that, upon Steele's leaving off, there
+ were two or three scrub Tatlers(21) came out, and one of them holds on
+ still, and to-day it advertised against Harrison's; and so there must be
+ disputes which are genuine, like the strops for razors.(22) I am afraid
+ the little toad has not the true vein for it. I will tell you a copy of
+ verses. When Mr. St. John was turned out from being Secretary at War,
+ three years ago, he retired to the country: there he was talking of
+ something he would have written over his summer-house, and a gentleman
+ gave him these verses&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ From business and the noisy world retired,
+ Nor vexed by love, nor by ambition fired;
+ Gently I wait the call of Charon's boat,
+ Still drinking like a fish, and &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;- like a stoat.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ He swore to me he could hardly bear the jest; for he pretended to retire
+ like a philosopher, though he was but twenty-eight years old: and I
+ believe the thing was true: for he had been a thorough rake. I think the
+ three grave lines do introduce the last well enough. Od so, but I will go
+ sleep; I sleep early now.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. O, faith, young women, I want a letter from MD; 'tis now nineteen days
+ since I had the last: and where have I room to answer it, pray? I hope I
+ shall send this away without any answer at all; for I'll hasten it, and
+ away it goes on Tuesday, by which time this side will be full. I will send
+ it two days sooner on purpose out of spite; and the very next day after,
+ you must know, your letter will come, and then 'tis too late, and I will
+ so laugh, never saw the like! 'Tis spring with us already. I ate asparagus
+ t'other day. Did you ever see such a frostless winter? Sir Andrew
+ Fountaine lies still extremely ill; it costs him ten guineas a day to
+ doctors, surgeons, and apothecaries, and has done so these three weeks. I
+ dined to-day with Mr. Ford; he sometimes chooses to dine at home, and I am
+ content to dine with him; and at night I called at the Coffee-house, where
+ I had not been in a week, and talked coldly a while with Mr. Addison. All
+ our friendship and dearness are off: we are civil acquaintance, talk words
+ of course, of when we shall meet, and that is all. I have not been at any
+ house with him these six weeks: t'other day we were to have dined together
+ at the Comptroller's;(23) but I sent my excuses, being engaged to the
+ Secretary of State. Is not it odd? But I think he has used me ill; and I
+ have used him too well, at least his friend Steele.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. It has cost me three guineas to-day for a periwig.(24) I am undone! It
+ was made by a Leicester lad, who married Mr. Worrall's daughter, where my
+ mother lodged;(25) so I thought it would be cheap, and especially since he
+ lives in the city. Well, London lickpenny:(26) I find it true. I have
+ given Harrison hints for another Tatler to-morrow. The jackanapes wants a
+ right taste: I doubt he won't do. I dined with my friend Lewis of the
+ Secretary's office, and am got home early, because I have much business to
+ do; but before I begin, I must needs say something to MD, faith&mdash;No,
+ faith, I lie, it is but nineteen days to-day since my last from MD. I have
+ got Mr. Harley to promise that whatever changes are made in the Council,
+ the Bishop of Clogher shall not be removed, and he has got a memorial
+ accordingly. I will let the Bishop know so much in a post or two. This is
+ a secret; but I know he has enemies, and they shall not be gratified, if
+ they designed any such thing, which perhaps they might; for some changes
+ there will be made. So drink up your claret, and be quiet, and do not lose
+ your money.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. Morning. Faith, I will send this letter to-day to shame you, if I
+ han't one from MD before night, that's certain. Won't you grumble for want
+ of the third side, pray now? Yes, I warrant you; yes, yes, you shall have
+ the third, you shall so, when you can catch it, some other time; when you
+ be writing girls.&mdash;O, faith, I think I won't stay till night, but
+ seal up this just now, and carry it in my pocket, and whip it into the
+ post-office as I come home at evening. I am going out early this morning.&mdash;Patrick's
+ bills for coals and candles, etc., come sometimes to three shillings a
+ week; I keep very good fires, though the weather be warm. Ireland will
+ never be happy till you get small coal(27) likewise; nothing so easy, so
+ convenient, so cheap, so pretty, for lighting a fire. My service to Mrs.
+ Stoyte and Walls; has she a boy or a girl? A girl, hum; and died in a
+ week, humm; and was poor Stella forced to stand for godmother?&mdash;Let
+ me know how accompts stand, that you may have your money betimes. There's
+ four months for my lodging, that must be thought on too: and so go dine
+ with Manley, and lose your money, do, extravagant sluttikin, but don't
+ fret.&mdash;It will be just three weeks when I have the next letter,
+ that's to-morrow. Farewell, dearest beloved MD; and love poor, poor
+ Presto, who has not had one happy day since he left you, as hope saved.&mdash;It
+ is the last sally I will ever make, but I hope it will turn to some
+ account. I have done more for these,(28) and I think they are more honest
+ than the last; however, I will not be disappointed. I would make MD and me
+ easy; and I never desired more.&mdash;Farewell, etc. etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0017" id="link2H_4_0017">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 14.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, Jan. 16, 1710-11.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ O faith, young women, I have sent my letter N.13 without one crumb of an
+ answer to any of MD's, there's for you now; and yet Presto ben't angry,
+ faith, not a bit, only he will begin to be in pain next Irish post, except
+ he sees MD's little handwriting in the glass-frame at the bar of St.
+ James's Coffee-house, where Presto would never go but for that purpose.
+ Presto is at home, God help him, every night from six till bed-time, and
+ has as little enjoyment or pleasure in life at present as anybody in the
+ world, although in full favour with all the Ministry. As hope saved,
+ nothing gives Presto any sort of dream of happiness but a letter now and
+ then from his own dearest MD. I love the expectation of it; and when it
+ does not come, I comfort myself that I have it yet to be happy with. Yes,
+ faith, and when I write to MD, I am happy too; it is just as if methinks
+ you were here, and I prating to you, and telling you where I have been:
+ "Well," says you, "Presto, come, where have you been to-day? come, let's
+ hear now." And so then I answer: "Ford and I were visiting Mr. Lewis and
+ Mr. Prior; and Prior has given me a fine Plautus; and then Ford would have
+ had me dine at his lodgings, and so I would not; and so I dined with him
+ at an eating-house, which I have not done five times since I came here;
+ and so I came home, after visiting Sir Andrew Fountaine's mother and
+ sister, and Sir Andrew Fountaine is mending, though slowly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. I was making, this morning, some general visits, and at twelve I
+ called at the Coffee-house for a letter from MD; so the man said he had
+ given it to Patrick. Then I went to the Court of Requests and Treasury, to
+ find Mr. Harley, and, after some time spent in mutual reproaches, I
+ promised to dine with him. I stayed there till seven, then called at
+ Sterne's and Leigh's to talk about your box, and to have it sent by Smyth.
+ Sterne says he has been making inquiries, and will set things right as
+ soon as possible. I suppose it lies at Chester, at least I hope so, and
+ only wants a lift over to you. Here has little Harrison been to complain
+ that the printer I recommended to him for his Tatler is a coxcomb; and yet
+ to see how things will happen; for this very printer is my cousin, his
+ name is Dryden Leach;(1) did you never hear of Dryden Leach, he that
+ prints the Postman? He acted Oroonoko;(2) he's in love with Miss Cross.(3)&mdash;Well,
+ so I came home to read my letter from Stella, but the dog Patrick was
+ abroad; at last he came, and I got my letter. I found another hand had
+ superscribed it; when I opened it, I found it written all in French, and
+ subscribed Bernage:(4) faith, I was ready to fling it at Patrick's head.
+ Bernage tells me he had been to desire your recommendation to me, to make
+ him a captain; and your cautious answer, that he had as much power with me
+ as you, was a notable one; if you were here, I would present you to the
+ Ministry as a person of ability. Bernage should let me know where to write
+ to him; this is the second letter I have had without any direction;
+ however, I beg I may not have a third, but that you will ask him, and send
+ me how I shall direct to him. In the meantime, tell him that if regiments
+ are to be raised here, as he says, I will speak to George Granville,(5)
+ Secretary at War, to make him a captain; and use what other interest I
+ conveniently can. I think that is enough, and so tell him, and do not
+ trouble me with his letters, when I expect them from MD; do you hear,
+ young women? write to Presto.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. I was this morning with Mr. Secretary St. John, and we were to dine at
+ Mr. Harley's alone, about some business of importance; but there were two
+ or three gentlemen there. Mr. Secretary and I went together from his
+ office to Mr. Harley's, and thought to have been very wise; but the deuce
+ a bit, the company stayed, and more came, and Harley went away at seven,
+ and the Secretary and I stayed with the rest of the company till eleven; I
+ would then have had him come away; but he was in for't; and though he
+ swore he would come away at that flask, there I left him. I wonder at the
+ civility of these people; when he saw I would drink no more, he would
+ always pass the bottle by me, and yet I could not keep the toad from
+ drinking himself, nor he would not let me go neither, nor Masham,(6) who
+ was with us. When I got home, I found a parcel directed to me; and opening
+ it, I found a pamphlet written entirely against myself, not by name, but
+ against something I writ:(7) it is pretty civil, and affects to be so, and
+ I think I will take no notice of it; 'tis against something written very
+ lately; and indeed I know not what to say, nor do I care. And so you are a
+ saucy rogue for losing your money to-day at Stoyte's; to let that bungler
+ beat you, fie, Stella, an't you ashamed? Well, I forgive you this once,
+ never do so again; no, noooo. Kiss and be friends, sirrah.&mdash;Come, let
+ me go sleep, I go earlier to bed than formerly; and have not been out so
+ late these two months; but the Secretary was in a drinking humour. So
+ good-night, myownlittledearsaucyinsolentrogues.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. Then you read that long word in the last line; no,(8) faith, han't
+ you. Well, when will this letter come from our MD? to-morrow or next day
+ without fail; yes, faith, and so it is coming. This was an insipid snowy
+ day, no walking day, and I dined gravely with Mrs. Vanhomrigh, and came
+ home, and am now got to bed a little after ten; I remember old Culpepper's
+ maxim:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Would you have a settled head,
+ You must early go to bed:
+ I tell you, and I tell't again,
+ You must be in bed at ten."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ 20. And so I went to-day with my new wig, o hoao, to visit Lady
+ Worsley,(9) whom I had not seen before, although she was near a month in
+ town. Then I walked in the Park to find Mr. Ford, whom I had promised to
+ meet; and coming down the Mall, who should come towards me but Patrick,
+ and gives me five letters out of his pocket. I read the superscription of
+ the first, "Pshoh," said I; of the second, "Pshoh" again; of the third,
+ "Pshah, pshah, pshah"; of the fourth, "A gad, a gad, a gad, I'm in a
+ rage"; of the fifth and last, "O hoooa; ay marry this is something, this
+ is our MD"; so truly we opened it, I think immediately, and it began the
+ most impudently in the world, thus: "Dear Presto, We are even thus far."
+ "Now we are even," quoth Stephen, when he gave his wife six blows for one.
+ I received your ninth four days after I had sent my thirteenth. But I'll
+ reckon with you anon about that, young women. Why did not you recant at
+ the end of your letter, when you got my eleventh, tell me that, huzzies
+ base? were we even then, were we, sirrah? But I won't answer your letter
+ now, I'll keep it for another time. We had a great deal of snow to-day,
+ and 'tis terrible cold. I dined with Ford, because it was his Opera-day
+ and snowed, so I did not care to stir farther. I will send tomorrow to
+ Smyth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21. Morning. It has snowed terribly all night, and is vengeance cold. I am
+ not yet up, but cannot write long; my hands will freeze. "Is there a good
+ fire, Patrick?" "Yes, sir." "Then I will rise; come, take away the
+ candle." You must know I write on the dark side of my bed-chamber, and am
+ forced to have a candle till I rise, for the bed stands between me and the
+ window, and I keep the curtains shut this cold weather. So pray let me
+ rise; and Patrick, here, take away the candle.&mdash;At night. We are now
+ here in high frost and snow, the largest fire can hardly keep us warm. It
+ is very ugly walking; a baker's boy broke his thigh yesterday. I walk
+ slow, make short steps, and never tread on my heel. 'Tis a good proverb
+ the Devonshire people have:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Walk fast in snow,
+ In frost walk slow;
+ And still as you go,
+ Tread on your toe.
+ When frost and snow are both together,
+ Sit by the fire, and spare shoe-leather."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I dined to-day with Dr. Cockburn,(10) but will not do so again in haste,
+ he has generally such a parcel of Scots with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22. Morning. Starving, starving, uth, uth, uth, uth, uth.&mdash;Don't you
+ remember I used to come into your chamber, and turn Stella out of her
+ chair, and rake up the fire in a cold morning, and cry Uth, uth, uth? etc.
+ O, faith, I must rise, my hand is so cold I can write no more. So
+ good-morrow, sirrahs.&mdash;At night. I went this morning to Lady
+ Giffard's house, and saw your mother, and made her give me a pint bottle
+ of palsy-water,(11) which I brought home in my pocket; and sealed and tied
+ up in a paper, and sent it to Mr. Smyth, who goes to-morrow for Ireland,
+ and sent a letter to him to desire his care of it, and that he would
+ inquire at Chester about the box. He was not within: so the bottle and
+ letter were left for him at his lodgings, with strict orders to give them
+ to him; and I will send Patrick in a day or two, to know whether it was
+ given, etc. Dr. Stratford(12) and I dined to-day with Mr. Stratford(13) in
+ the City, by appointment; but I chose to walk there, for exercise in the
+ frost. But the weather had given a little, as you women call it, so it was
+ something slobbery. I did not get home till nine.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ And now I'm in bed,
+ To break your head.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ 23. Morning. They tell me it freezes again, but it is not so cold as
+ yesterday: so now I will answer a bit of your letter.&mdash;At night. O,
+ faith, I was just going to answer some of our MD's letter this morning,
+ when a printer came in about some business, and stayed an hour; so I rose,
+ and then came in Ben Tooke, and then I shaved and scribbled; and it was
+ such a terrible day, I could not stir out till one, and then I called at
+ Mrs. Barton's, and we went to Lady Worsley's, where we were to dine by
+ appointment. The Earl of Berkeley(14) is going to be married to Lady
+ Louisa Lennox, the Duke of Richmond's daughter. I writ this night to Dean
+ Sterne, and bid him tell you all about the bottle of palsy-water by Smyth;
+ and to-morrow morning I will say something to your letter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24. Morning. Come now to your letter. As for your being even with me, I
+ have spoken to that already. So now, my dearly beloved, let us proceed to
+ the next. You are always grumbling that you han't letters fast enough;
+ "surely we shall have your tenth;" and yet, before you end your letter,
+ you own you have my eleventh.&mdash;And why did not MD go into the country
+ with the Bishop of Clogher? faith, such a journey would have done you
+ good; Stella should have rode, and Dingley gone in the coach. The Bishop
+ of Kilmore(15) I know nothing of; he is old, and may die; he lives in some
+ obscure corner, for I never heard of him. As for my old friends, if you
+ mean the Whigs, I never see them, as you may find by my journals, except
+ Lord Halifax, and him very seldom; Lord Somers never since the first
+ visit, for he has been a false, deceitful rascal.(16) My new friends are
+ very kind, and I have promises enough, but I do not count upon them, and
+ besides my pretences are very young to them. However, we will see what may
+ be done; and if nothing at all, I shall not be disappointed; although
+ perhaps poor MD may, and then I shall be sorrier for their sakes than my
+ own.&mdash;Talk of a merry Christmas (why do you write it so then, young
+ women? sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander), I have wished you all
+ that two or three letters ago. Good lack; and your news, that Mr. St. John
+ is going to Holland; he has no such thoughts, to quit the great station he
+ is in; nor, if he had, could I be spared to go with him. So, faith,
+ politic Madam Stella, you come with your two eggs a penny, etc. Well,
+ Madam Dingley, and so Mrs. Stoyte invites you, and so you stay at
+ Donnybrook, and so you could not write. You are plaguy exact in your
+ journals, from Dec. 25 to Jan. 4. Well, Smyth and the palsy-water I have
+ handled already, and he does not lodge (or rather did not, for, poor man,
+ now he is gone) at Mr. Jesse's, and all that stuff; but we found his
+ lodging, and I went to Stella's mother on my own head, for I never
+ remembered it was in the letter to desire another bottle; but I was so
+ fretted, so tosticated, and so impatient that Stella should have her water
+ (I mean decently, do not be rogues), and so vexed with Sterne's
+ carelessness.&mdash;Pray God, Stella's illness may not return! If they
+ come seldom, they begin to be weary; I judge by myself; for when I seldom
+ visit, I grow weary of my acquaintance.&mdash;Leave a good deal of my
+ tenth unanswered! Impudent slut, when did you ever answer my tenth, or
+ ninth, or any other number? or who desires you to answer, provided you
+ write? I defy the D&mdash;&mdash; to answer my letters: sometimes there
+ may be one or two things I should be glad you would answer; but I forget
+ them, and you never think of them. I shall never love answering letters
+ again, if you talk of answering. Answering, quotha! pretty answerers
+ truly.&mdash;As for the pamphlet you speak of, and call it scandalous, and
+ that one Mr. Presto is said to write it, hear my answer. Fie, child, you
+ must not mind what every idle body tells you&mdash;I believe you lie, and
+ that the dogs were not crying it when you said so; come, tell truth. I am
+ sorry you go to St. Mary's(17) so soon, you will be as poor as rats; that
+ place will drain you with a vengeance: besides, I would have you think of
+ being in the country in summer. Indeed, Stella, pippins produced
+ plentifully; Parvisol could not send from Laracor: there were about half a
+ score, I would be glad to know whether they were good for anything.&mdash;Mrs.
+ Walls at Donnybrook with you; why is not she brought to bed? Well, well,
+ well, Dingley, pray be satisfied; you talk as if you were angry about the
+ Bishop's not offering you conveniences for the journey; and so he should.&mdash;What
+ sort of Christmas? Why, I have had no Christmas at all; and has it really
+ been Christmas of late? I never once thought of it. My service to Mrs.
+ Stoyte, and Catherine; and let Catherine get the coffee ready against I
+ come, and not have so much care on her countenance; for all will go well.&mdash;Mr.
+ Bernage, Mr. Bernage, Mr. Fiddlenage, I have had three letters from him
+ now successively; he sends no directions, and how the D&mdash;&mdash;
+ shall I write to him? I would have burnt his last, if I had not seen
+ Stella's hand at the bottom: his request is all nonsense. How can I assist
+ him in buying? and if he be ordered to go to Spain, go he must, or else
+ sell, and I believe one can hardly sell in such a juncture. If he had
+ stayed, and new regiments raised, I would have used my endeavour to have
+ had him removed; although I have no credit that way, or very little: but,
+ if the regiment goes, he ought to go too; he has had great indulgence, and
+ opportunities of saving; and I have urged him to it a hundred times. What
+ can I do? whenever it lies in my power to do him a good office, I will do
+ it. Pray draw up this into a handsome speech, and represent it to him from
+ me, and that I would write, if I knew where to direct to him; and so I
+ have told you, and desired you would tell him, fifty times. Yes, Madam
+ Stella, I think I can read your long concluding word, but you can't read
+ mine after bidding you good-night. And yet methinks, I mend extremely in
+ my writing; but when Stella's eyes are well, I hope to write as bad as
+ ever.&mdash;So now I have answered your letter, and mine is an answer; for
+ I lay yours before me, and I look and write, and write and look, and look
+ and write again.&mdash;So good-morrow, madams both, and I will go rise,
+ for I must rise; for I take pills at night, and so I must rise early, I
+ don't know why.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25. Morning. I did not tell you how I passed my time yesterday, nor bid
+ you good-night, and there was good reason. I went in the morning to
+ Secretary St. John about some business; he had got a great Whig with him;
+ a creature of the Duke of Marlborough, who is a go-between to make peace
+ between the Duke and the Ministry: so he came out of his closet, and,
+ after a few words, desired I would dine with him at three; but Mr. Lewis
+ stayed till six before he came; and there we sat talking, and the time
+ slipped so, that at last, when I was positive to go, it was past two
+ o'clock; so I came home, and went straight to bed. He would never let me
+ look at his watch, and I could not imagine it above twelve when we went
+ away. So I bid you good-night for last night, and now I bid you
+ good-morrow, and I am still in bed, though it be near ten, but I must
+ rise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26, 27, 28, 29, 30. I have been so lazy and negligent these last four days
+ that I could not write to MD. My head is not in order, and yet is not
+ absolutely ill, but giddyish, and makes me listless; I walk every day, and
+ take drops of Dr. Cockburn, and I have just done a box of pills; and
+ to-day Lady Kerry sent me some of her bitter drink, which I design to take
+ twice a day, and hope I shall grow better. I wish I were with MD; I long
+ for spring and good weather, and then I will come over. My riding in
+ Ireland keeps me well. I am very temperate, and eat of the easiest meats
+ as I am directed, and hope the malignity will go off; but one fit shakes
+ me a long time. I dined to-day with Lord Mountjoy, yesterday at Mr.
+ Stone's, in the City, on Sunday at Vanhomrigh's, Saturday with Ford, and
+ Friday I think at Vanhomrigh's; and that is all the journal I can send MD,
+ for I was so lazy while I was well, that I could not write. I thought to
+ have sent this to-night, but 'tis ten, and I'll go to bed, and write on
+ t'other side to Parvisol to-morrow, and send it on Thursday; and so
+ good-night, my dears; and love Presto, and be healthy, and Presto will be
+ so too, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cut off these notes handsomely, d'ye hear, sirrahs, and give Mrs. Brent
+ hers, and keep yours till you see Parvisol, and then make up the letter to
+ him, and send it him by the first opportunity; and so God Almighty bless
+ you both, here and ever, and poor Presto.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What, I warrant you thought at first that these last lines were another
+ letter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dingley, Pray pay Stella six fishes, and place them to the account of your
+ humble servant, Presto.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stella, Pray pay Dingley six fishes, and place them to the account of your
+ humble servant, Presto.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are bills of exchange for you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0018" id="link2H_4_0018">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 15.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, Jan. 31, 1710-11.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I am to send you my fourteenth to-morrow; but my head, having some little
+ disorders, confounds all my journals. I was early this morning with Mr.
+ Secretary St. John about some business, so I could not scribble my morning
+ lines to MD. They are here intending to tax all little printed penny
+ papers a halfpenny every half-sheet, which will utterly ruin Grub Street,
+ and I am endeavouring to prevent it.(1) Besides, I was forwarding an
+ impeachment against a certain great person; that was two of my businesses
+ with the Secretary, were they not worthy ones? It was Ford's birthday, and
+ I refused the Secretary, and dined with Ford. We are here in as smart a
+ frost for the time as I have seen; delicate walking weather, and the Canal
+ and Rosamond's Pond(2) full of the rabble sliding and with skates, if you
+ know what those are. Patrick's bird's water freezes in the gallipot, and
+ my hands in bed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Feb. 1. I was this morning with poor Lady Kerry, who is much worse in her
+ head than I. She sends me bottles of her bitter; and we are so fond of one
+ another, because our ailments are the same; don't you know that, Madam
+ Stella? Han't I seen you conning ailments with Joe's wife,(3) and some
+ others, sirrah? I walked into the City to dine, because of the walk, for
+ we must take care of Presto's health, you know, because of poor little MD.
+ But I walked plaguy carefully, for fear of sliding against my will; but I
+ am very busy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. This morning Mr. Ford came to me to walk into the City, where he had
+ business, and then to buy books at Bateman's; and I laid out one pound
+ five shillings for a Strabo and Aristophanes, and I have now got books
+ enough to make me another shelf, and I will have more, or it shall cost me
+ a fall; and so as we came back, we drank a flask of right French wine at
+ Ben Tooke's chamber; and when I got home, Mrs. Vanhomrigh sent me word her
+ eldest daughter(4) was taken suddenly very ill, and desired I would come
+ and see her. I went, and found it was a silly trick of Mrs. Armstrong,(5)
+ Lady Lucy's sister, who, with Moll Stanhope, was visiting there: however,
+ I rattled off the daughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. To-day I went and dined at Lady Lucy's, where you know I have not been
+ this long time. They are plaguy Whigs, especially the sister Armstrong,
+ the most insupportable of all women, pretending to wit, without any taste.
+ She was running down the last Examiner,(6) the prettiest I had read, with
+ a character of the present Ministry.&mdash;I left them at five, and came
+ home. But I forgot to tell you, that this morning my cousin Dryden Leach,
+ the printer, came to me with a heavy complaint, that Harrison the new
+ Tatler had turned him off, and taken the last Tatler's printers again. He
+ vowed revenge; I answered gravely, and so he left me, and I have ordered
+ Patrick to deny me to him from henceforth: and at night comes a letter
+ from Harrison, telling me the same thing, and excused his doing it without
+ my notice, because he would bear all the blame; and in his Tatler of this
+ day(7) he tells you the story, how he has taken his old officers, and
+ there is a most humble letter from Morphew and Lillie to beg his pardon,
+ etc.(8) And lastly, this morning Ford sent me two letters from the
+ Coffee-house (where I hardly ever go), one from the Archbishop of Dublin,
+ and t'other from&mdash;Who do you think t'other was from?&mdash;I'll tell
+ you, because you are friends; why, then it was, faith, it was from my own
+ dear little MD, N.10. Oh, but will not answer it now, no, noooooh, I'll
+ keep it between the two sheets; here it is, just under; oh, I lifted up
+ the sheet and saw it there: lie still, you shan't be answered yet, little
+ letter; for I must go to bed, and take care of my head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. I avoid going to church yet, for fear of my head, though it has been
+ much better these last five or six days, since I have taken Lady Kerry's
+ bitter. Our frost holds like a dragon. I went to Mr. Addison's, and dined
+ with him at his lodgings; I had not seen him these three weeks, we are
+ grown common acquaintance; yet what have not I done for his friend Steele?
+ Mr. Harley reproached me the last time I saw him, that to please me he
+ would be reconciled to Steele, and had promised and appointed to see him,
+ and that Steele never came. Harrison, whom Mr. Addison recommended to me,
+ I have introduced to the Secretary of State, who has promised me to take
+ care of him; and I have represented Addison himself so to the Ministry,
+ that they think and talk in his favour, though they hated him before.&mdash;Well,
+ he is now in my debt, and there's an end; and I never had the least
+ obligation to him, and there's another end. This evening I had a message
+ from Mr. Harley, desiring to know whether I was alive, and that I would
+ dine with him to-morrow. They dine so late, that since my head has been
+ wrong I have avoided being with them.&mdash;Patrick has been out of favour
+ these ten days; I talk dry and cross to him, and have called him "friend"
+ three or four times. But, sirrahs, get you gone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. Morning. I am going this morning to see Prior, who dines with me at Mr.
+ Harley's; so I can't stay fiddling and talking with dear little brats in a
+ morning, and 'tis still terribly cold.&mdash;I wish my cold hand was in
+ the warmest place about you, young women, I'd give ten guineas upon that
+ account with all my heart, faith; oh, it starves my thigh; so I'll rise
+ and bid you good-morrow, my ladies both, good-morrow. Come, stand away,
+ let me rise: Patrick, take away the candle. Is there a good fire?&mdash;So&mdash;up-a-dazy.&mdash;At
+ night. Mr. Harley did not sit down till six, and I stayed till eleven;
+ henceforth I will choose to visit him in the evenings, and dine with him
+ no more if I can help it. It breaks all my measures, and hurts my health;
+ my head is disorderly, but not ill, and I hope it will mend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. Here has been such a hurry with the Queen's Birthday, so much fine
+ clothes, and the Court so crowded that I did not go there. All the frost
+ is gone. It thawed on Sunday, and so continues, yet ice is still on the
+ Canal (I did not mean that of Laracor, but St. James's Park) and boys
+ sliding on it. Mr. Ford pressed me to dine with him in his chamber.&mdash;Did
+ not I tell you Patrick has got a bird, a linnet, to carry over to Dingley?
+ It was very tame at first, and 'tis now the wildest I ever saw. He keeps
+ it in a closet, where it makes a terrible litter; but I say nothing: I am
+ as tame as a clout. When must we answer our MD's letter? One of these
+ odd-come-shortlies. This is a week old, you see, and no farther yet. Mr.
+ Harley desired I would dine with him again to-day; but I refused him, for
+ I fell out with him yesterday,(9) and will not see him again till he makes
+ me amends: and so I go to bed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. I was this morning early with Mr. Lewis of the Secretary's office, and
+ saw a letter Mr. Harley had sent to him, desiring to be reconciled; but I
+ was deaf to all entreaties, and have desired Lewis to go to him, and let
+ him know I expect further satisfaction. If we let these great Ministers
+ pretend too much, there will be no governing them. He promises to make me
+ easy, if I will but come and see him; but I won't, and he shall do it by
+ message, or I will cast him off. I'll tell you the cause of our quarrel
+ when I see you, and refer it to yourselves. In that he did something,
+ which he intended for a favour; and I have taken it quite otherwise,
+ disliking both the thing and the manner, and it has heartily vexed me, and
+ all I have said is truth, though it looks like jest; and I absolutely
+ refused to submit to his intended favour, and expect further satisfaction.
+ Mr. Ford and I dined with Mr. Lewis. We have a monstrous deal of snow, and
+ it has cost me two shillings to-day in chair and coach, and walked till I
+ was dirty besides. I know not what it is now to read or write after I am
+ in bed. The last thing I do up is to write something to our MD, and then
+ get into bed, and put out my candle, and so go sleep as fast as ever I
+ can. But in the mornings I do write sometimes in bed, as you know.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. Morning. I HAVE DESIRED APRONIA TO BE ALWAYS CAREFUL, ESPECIALLY ABOUT
+ THE LEGS. Pray, do you see any such great wit in that sentence? I must
+ freely own that I do not. But party carries everything nowadays, and what
+ a splutter have I heard about the wit of that saying, repeated with
+ admiration above a hundred times in half an hour! Pray read it over again
+ this moment, and consider it. I think the word is ADVISED, and not
+ DESIRED. I should not have remembered it if I had not heard it so often.
+ Why&mdash;ay&mdash;You must know I dreamed it just now, and waked with it
+ in my mouth. Are you bit, or are you not, sirrahs? I met Mr. Harley in the
+ Court of Requests, and he asked me how long I had learnt the trick of
+ writing to myself? He had seen your letter through the glass case at the
+ Coffee-house, and would swear it was my hand; and Mr. Ford, who took and
+ sent it me, was of the same mind. I remember others have formerly said so
+ too. I think I was little MD's writing-master.(10)&mdash;But come, what is
+ here to do, writing to young women in a morning? I have other fish to fry;
+ so good-morrow, my ladies all, good-morrow. Perhaps I'll answer your
+ letter to-night, perhaps I won't; that's as saucy little Presto takes the
+ humour.&mdash;At night. I walked in the Park to-day in spite of the
+ weather, as I do always when it does not actually rain. Do you know what
+ it has gone and done? We had a thaw for three days, then a monstrous dirt
+ and snow, and now it freezes, like a pot-lid, upon our snow. I dined with
+ Lady Betty Germaine, the first time since I came for England; and there
+ did I sit, like a booby, till eight, looking over her and another lady at
+ piquet, when I had other business enough to do. It was the coldest day I
+ felt this year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. Morning. After I had been abed an hour last night, I was forced to rise
+ and call to the landlady and maid to have the fire removed in a chimney
+ below stairs, which made my bed-chamber smoke, though I had no fire in it.
+ I have been twice served so. I never lay so miserable an hour in my life.
+ Is it not plaguy vexatious?&mdash;It has snowed all night, and rains this
+ morning.&mdash;Come, where's MD's letter? Come, Mrs. Letter, make your
+ appearance. Here am I, says she, answer me to my face.&mdash;O, faith, I
+ am sorry you had my twelfth so soon; I doubt you will stay longer for the
+ rest. I'm so 'fraid you have got my fourteenth while I am writing this;
+ and I would always have one letter from Presto reading, one travelling,
+ and one writing. As for the box, I now believe it lost. It is directed for
+ Mr. Curry, at his house in Capel Street, etc. I had a letter yesterday
+ from Dr. Raymond in Chester, who says he sent his man everywhere, and
+ cannot find it; and God knows whether Mr. Smyth will have better success.
+ Sterne spoke to him, and I writ to him with the bottle of palsy-water;
+ that bottle, I hope, will not miscarry: I long to hear you have it. O,
+ faith, you have too good an opinion of Presto's care. I am negligent
+ enough of everything but MD, and I should not have trusted Sterne.&mdash;But
+ it shall not go so: I will have one more tug for it.&mdash;As to what you
+ say of Goodman Peasly and Isaac,(11) I answer as I did before. Fie, child,
+ you must not give yourself the way to believe any such thing: and
+ afterwards, only for curiosity, you may tell me how these things are
+ approved, and how you like them; and whether they instruct you in the
+ present course of affairs, and whether they are printed in your town, or
+ only sent from hence.&mdash;Sir Andrew Fountaine is recovered; so take
+ your sorrow again, but don't keep it, fling it to the dogs. And does
+ little MD walk indeed?&mdash;I'm glad of it at heart.&mdash;Yes, we have
+ done with the plague here: it was very saucy in you to pretend to have it
+ before your betters. Your intelligence that the story is false about the
+ officers forced to sell,(12) is admirable. You may see them all three here
+ every day, no more in the army than you. Twelve shillings for mending the
+ strong box; that is, for putting a farthing's worth of iron on a hinge,
+ and gilding it; give him six shillings, and I'll pay it, and never employ
+ him or his again.&mdash;No indeed, I put off preaching as much as I can. I
+ am upon another foot: nobody doubts here whether I can preach, and you are
+ fools.&mdash;The account you give of that weekly paper(13) agrees with us
+ here. Mr. Prior was like to be insulted in the street for being supposed
+ the author of it; but one of the last papers cleared him. Nobody knows who
+ it is, but those few in the secret, I suppose the Ministry and the
+ printer.&mdash;Poor Stella's eyes! God bless them, and send them better.
+ Pray spare them, and write not above two lines a day in broad daylight.
+ How does Stella look, Madam Dingley? Pretty well, a handsome young woman
+ still. Will she pass in a crowd? Will she make a figure in a country
+ church?&mdash;Stay a little, fair ladies. I this minute sent Patrick to
+ Sterne: he brings back word that your box is very safe with one Mr. Earl's
+ sister in Chester, and that Colonel Edgworth's widow(14) goes for Ireland
+ on Monday next, and will receive the box at Chester, and deliver it you
+ safe: so there are some hopes now.&mdash;Well, let us go on to your
+ letter.&mdash;The warrant is passed for the First-Fruits. The Queen does
+ not send a letter; but a patent will be drawn here, and that will take up
+ time. Mr. Harley of late has said nothing of presenting me to the Queen: I
+ was overseen(15) when I mentioned it to you. He has such a weight of
+ affairs on him, that he cannot mind all; but he talked of it three or four
+ times to me, long before I dropped it to you. What, is not Mrs. Walls'
+ business over yet? I had hopes she was up and well, and the child dead
+ before this time.&mdash;You did right, at last, to send me your accompts;
+ but I did not stay for them, I thank you. I hope you have your bill sent
+ in my last, and there will be eight pounds' interest soon due from
+ Hawkshaw: pray look at his bond. I hope you are good managers; and that,
+ when I say so, Stella won't think I intend she should grudge herself wine.
+ But going to those expensive lodgings requires some fund. I wish you had
+ stayed till I came over, for some reasons. That Frenchwoman(16) will be
+ grumbling again in a little time: and if you are invited anywhere to the
+ country, it will vex you to pay in absence; and the country may be
+ necessary for poor Stella's health: but do as you like, and do not blame
+ Presto.&mdash;Oh, but you are telling your reasons.&mdash;Well, I have
+ read them; do as you please.&mdash;Yes, Raymond says he must stay longer
+ than he thought, because he cannot settle his affairs. M&mdash;&mdash; is
+ in the country at some friend's, comes to town in spring, and then goes to
+ settle in Herefordshire. Her husband is a surly, ill-natured brute, and
+ cares not she should see anybody. O Lord, see how I blundered, and left
+ two lines short; it was that ugly score in the paper(17) that made me
+ mistake.&mdash;I believe you lie about the story of the fire, only to make
+ it more odd. Bernage must go to Spain; and I will see to recommend him to
+ the Duke of Argyle, his General, when I see the Duke next: but the
+ officers tell me it would be dishonourable in the last degree for him to
+ sell now, and he would never be preferred in the army; so that, unless he
+ designs to leave it for good and all, he must go. Tell him so, and that I
+ would write if I knew where to direct to him; which I have said fourscore
+ times already. I had rather anything almost than that you should strain
+ yourselves to send a letter when it is inconvenient; we have settled that
+ matter already. I'll write when I can, and so shall MD; and upon occasions
+ extraordinary I will write, though it be a line; and when we have not
+ letters soon, we agree that all things are well; and so that's settled for
+ ever, and so hold your tongue.&mdash;Well, you shall have your pins; but
+ for candles' ends, I cannot promise, because I burn them to the stumps;
+ besides, I remember what Stella told Dingley about them many years ago,
+ and she may think the same thing of me.&mdash;And Dingley shall have her
+ hinged spectacles.&mdash;Poor dear Stella, how durst you write those two
+ lines by candlelight? bang your bones! Faith, this letter shall go
+ to-morrow, I think, and that will be in ten days from the last, young
+ women; that's too soon of all conscience: but answering yours has filled
+ it up so quick, and I do not design to use you to three pages in folio,
+ no, nooooh. All this is one morning's work in bed;&mdash;and so
+ good-morrow, little sirrahs; that's for the rhyme.(18) You want politics:
+ faith, I can't think of any; but may be at night I may tell you a passage.
+ Come, sit off the bed, and let me rise, will you?&mdash;At night. I dined
+ to-day with my neighbour Vanhomrigh; it was such dismal weather I could
+ not stir further. I have had some threatenings with my head, but no fits.
+ I still drink Dr. Radcliffe's(19) bitter, and will continue it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. I was this morning to see the Secretary of State, and have engaged him
+ to give a memorial from me to the Duke of Argyle in behalf of Bernage. The
+ Duke is a man that distinguishes people of merit, and I will speak to him
+ myself; but the Secretary backing it will be very effectual, and I will
+ take care to have it done to purpose. Pray tell Bernage so, and that I
+ think nothing can be luckier for him, and that I would have him go by all
+ means. I will order it that the Duke shall send for him when they are in
+ Spain; or, if he fails, that he shall receive him kindly when he goes to
+ wait on him. Can I do more? Is not this a great deal?&mdash;I now send
+ away this letter, that you may not stay.&mdash;I dined with Ford upon his
+ Opera-day, and am now come home, and am going to study; do not you presume
+ to guess, sirrahs, impudent saucy dear boxes. Towards the end of a letter
+ I could not say saucy boxes without putting dear between. An't that right
+ now? Farewell. THIS should BE longer, BUT that <i>I</i> send IT
+ to-night.(20)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ O silly, silly loggerhead!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I send a letter this post to one Mr. Staunton, and I direct it to Mr.
+ Acton's in St. Michael's Lane. He formerly lodged there, but he has not
+ told me where to direct. Pray send to that Acton, whether(21) the letter
+ is come there, and whether he has sent it to Staunton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If Bernage designs to sell his commission and stay at home, pray let him
+ tell me so, that my recommendation to the Duke of Argyle may not be in
+ vain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0019" id="link2H_4_0019">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 16.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, Feb. 10, 1710-11.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I have just despatched my fifteenth to the post; I tell you how things
+ will be, after I have got a letter from MD. I am in furious haste to
+ finish mine, for fear of having two of MD's to answer in one of Presto's,
+ which would be such a disgrace, never saw the like; but, before you write
+ to me, I write at my leisure, like a gentleman, a little every day, just
+ to let you know how matters go, and so and so; and I hope before this
+ comes to you, you'll have got your box and chocolate, and Presto will take
+ more care another time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. Morning. I must rise and go see my Lord Keeper,(1) which will cost me
+ two shillings in coach-hire. Don't you call them two thirteens?(2)&mdash;At
+ night. It has rained all day, and there was no walking. I read prayers to
+ Sir Andrew Fountaine in the forenoon, and I dined with three Irishmen, at
+ one Mr. Cope's(3) lodgings; the other two were one Morris an
+ archdeacon,(4) and Mr. Ford. When I came home this evening, I expected
+ that little jackanapes Harrison would have come to get help about his
+ Tatler for Tuesday: I have fixed two evenings in the week which I allow
+ him to come. The toad never came, and I expecting him fell a reading, and
+ left off other business.&mdash;Come, what are you doing? How do you pass
+ your time this ugly weather? Gaming and drinking, I suppose: fine
+ diversions for young ladies, truly! I wish you had some of our Seville
+ oranges, and we some of your wine. We have the finest oranges for twopence
+ apiece, and the basest wine for six shillings a bottle. They tell me wine
+ grows cheap with you. I am resolved to have half a hogshead when I get to
+ Ireland, if it be good and cheap, as it used to be; and I will treat MD at
+ my table in an evening, oh hoa, and laugh at great Ministers of State.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. The days are grown fine and long, &mdash;&mdash; be thanked. O, faith,
+ you forget all our little sayings, and I am angry. I dined to-day with Mr.
+ Secretary St. John: I went to the Court of Requests at noon, and sent Mr.
+ Harley into the House to call the Secretary, to let him know I would not
+ dine with him if he dined late. By good luck the Duke of Argyle was at the
+ lobby of the House too, and I kept him in talk till the Secretary came
+ out; then told them I was glad to meet them together, and that I had a
+ request to the Duke, which the Secretary must second, and his Grace must
+ grant. The Duke said he was sure it was something insignificant, and
+ wished it was ten times greater. At the Secretary's house I writ a
+ memorial, and gave it to the Secretary to give the Duke, and shall see
+ that he does it. It is, that his Grace will please to take Mr. Bernage
+ into his protection; and if he finds Bernage answers my character, to give
+ him all encouragement. Colonel Masham(5) and Colonel Hill(6) Mrs.
+ Masham's(7) brother tell me my request is reasonable, and they will second
+ it heartily to the Duke too: so I reckon Bernage is on a very good foot
+ when he goes to Spain. Pray tell him this, though perhaps I will write to
+ him before he goes; yet where shall I direct? for I suppose he has left
+ Connolly's.(8)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. I have left off Lady Kerry's bitter, and got another box of pills. I
+ have no fits of giddiness, but only some little disorders towards it; and
+ I walk as much as I can. Lady Kerry is just as I am, only a great deal
+ worse: I dined to-day at Lord Shelburne's, where she is, and we con
+ ailments, which makes us very fond of each other. I have taken Mr. Harley
+ into favour again, and called to see him, but he was not within; I will
+ use to visit him after dinner, for he dines too late for my head: then I
+ went to visit poor Congreve, who is just getting out of a severe fit of
+ the gout; and I sat with him till near nine o'clock. He gave me a
+ Tatler(9) he had written out, as blind as he is, for little Harrison. It
+ is about a scoundrel that was grown rich, and went and bought a coat of
+ arms at the Herald's, and a set of ancestors at Fleet Ditch; 'tis well
+ enough, and shall be printed in two or three days, and if you read those
+ kind of things, this will divert you. It is now between ten and eleven,
+ and I am going to bed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. This was Mrs. Vanhomrigh's daughter's(10) birthday, and Mr. Ford and I
+ were invited to dinner to keep it, and we spent the evening there,
+ drinking punch. That was our way of beginning Lent; and in the morning
+ Lord Shelburne, Lady Kerry, Mrs. Pratt, and I, went to Hyde Park, instead
+ of going to church; for, till my head is a little settled, I think it
+ better not to go; it would be so silly and troublesome to go out sick. Dr.
+ Duke(11) died suddenly two or three nights ago; he was one of the wits
+ when we were children, but turned parson, and left it, and never writ
+ farther than a prologue or recommendatory copy of verses. He had a fine
+ living given him by the Bishop of Winchester(12) about three months ago;
+ he got his living suddenly, and he got his dying so too.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. I walked purely to-day about the Park, the rain being just over, of
+ which we have had a great deal, mixed with little short frosts. I went to
+ the Court of Requests, thinking, if Mr. Harley dined early, to go with
+ him. But meeting Leigh and Sterne, they invited me to dine with them, and
+ away we went. When we got into his room, one H&mdash;&mdash;, a worthless
+ Irish fellow, was there, ready to dine with us; so I stepped out, and
+ whispered them, that I would not dine with that fellow: they made excuses,
+ and begged me to stay; but away I went to Mr. Harley's, and he did not
+ dine at home; and at last I dined at Sir John Germaine's,(13) and found
+ Lady Betty but just recovered of a miscarriage. I am writing an
+ inscription for Lord Berkeley's(14) tomb; you know the young rake his son,
+ the new Earl, is married to the Duke of Richmond's daughter,(15) at the
+ Duke's country house, and are now coming to town. She will be fluxed in
+ two months, and they'll be parted in a year. You ladies are brave, bold,
+ venturesome folks; and the chit is but seventeen, and is ill-natured,
+ covetous, vicious, and proud in extremes. And so get you gone to Stoyte
+ to-morrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. Faith, this letter goes on but slow; 'tis a week old, and the first
+ side not written. I went to-day into the City for a walk, but the person I
+ designed to dine with was not at home; so I came back, and called at
+ Congreve's, and dined with him and Estcourt,(16) and laughed till six;
+ then went to Mr. Harley's, who was not gone to dinner; there I stayed till
+ nine, and we made up our quarrel, and he has invited me to dinner
+ to-morrow, which is the day of the week (Saturday) that Lord Keeper and
+ Secretary St. John dine with him privately, and at last they have
+ consented to let me among them on that day. Atterbury and Prior went to
+ bury poor Dr. Duke. Congreve's nasty white wine has given me the
+ heart-burn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. I took some good walks in the Park to-day, and then went to Mr.
+ Harley. Lord Rivers was got there before me, and I chid him for presuming
+ to come on a day when only Lord Keeper and the Secretary and I were to be
+ there; but he regarded me not; so we all dined together, and sat down at
+ four; and the Secretary has invited me to dine with him to-morrow. I told
+ them I had no hopes they could ever keep in, but that I saw they loved one
+ another so well, as indeed they seem to do. They call me nothing but
+ Jonathan; and I said I believed they would leave me Jonathan as they found
+ me; and that I never knew a Ministry do anything for those whom they make
+ companions of their pleasures; and I believe you will find it so; but I
+ care not. I am upon a project of getting five hundred pounds,(17) without
+ being obliged to anybody; but that is a secret, till I see my dearest MD;
+ and so hold your tongue, and do not talk, sirrahs, for I am now about it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. My head has no fits, but a little disordered before dinner; yet I walk
+ stoutly, and take pills, and hope to mend. Secretary St. John would needs
+ have me dine with him to-day; and there I found three persons I never saw,
+ two I had no acquaintance with, and one I did not care for: so I left them
+ early and came home, it being no day to walk, but scurvy rain and wind.
+ The Secretary tells me he has put a cheat on me; for Lord Peterborow sent
+ him twelve dozen flasks of burgundy, on condition that I should have my
+ share; but he never was quiet till they were all gone, so I reckon he owes
+ me thirty-six pounds. Lord Peterborow is now got to Vienna, and I must
+ write to him to-morrow. I begin now to be towards looking for a letter
+ from some certain ladies of Presto's acquaintance, that live at St.
+ Mary's,(18) and are called in a certain language, our little MD. No, stay,
+ I don't expect one these six days, that will be just three weeks; an't I a
+ reasonable creature? We are plagued here with an October Club, that is, a
+ set of above a hundred Parliament men of the country, who drink October
+ beer at home, and meet every evening at a tavern near the Parliament to
+ consult affairs, and drive things on to extremes against the Whigs, to
+ call the old Ministry to account, and get off five or six heads.(19) The
+ Ministry seem not to regard them; yet one of them in confidence told me
+ that there must be something thought on, to settle things better. I'll
+ tell you one great State secret: the Queen, sensible how much she was
+ governed by the late Ministry, runs a little into t'other extreme, and is
+ jealous in that point, even of those who got her out of the others' hands.
+ The Ministry is for gentler measures, and the other Tories for more
+ violent. Lord Rivers, talking to me the other day, cursed the paper called
+ the Examiner, for speaking civilly of the Duke of Marlborough; this I
+ happened to talk of to the Secretary, who blamed the warmth of that lord
+ and some others, and swore that if their advice were followed they would
+ be blown up in twenty-four hours. And I have reason to think that they
+ will endeavour to prevail on the Queen to put her affairs more in the
+ hands of a Ministry than she does at present; and there are, I believe,
+ two men thought on, one of them you have often met the name of in my
+ letters. But so much for politics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. This proved a terrible rainy day, which prevented my walk into the
+ City, and I was only able to run and dine with my neighbour Vanhomrigh,
+ where Sir Andrew Fountaine dined too, who has just began to sally out, and
+ has shipped his mother and sister, who were his nurses, back to the
+ country. This evening was fair, and I walked a little in the Park, till
+ Prior made me go with him to the Smyrna Coffee-house, where I sat a while,
+ and saw four or five Irish persons, who are very handsome, genteel
+ fellows; but I know not their names. I came away at seven, and got home.
+ Two days ago I writ to Bernage, and told him what I had done, and directed
+ the letter to Mr. Curry's, to be left with Dingley. Brigadiers Hill and
+ Masham, brother and husband to Mrs. Masham, the Queen's favourite, Colonel
+ Disney,(20) and I, have recommended Bernage to the Duke of Argyle; and
+ Secretary St. John has given the Duke my memorial; and, besides, Hill
+ tells me, that Bernage's colonel, Fielding,(21) designs to make him his
+ captain-lieutenant: but I believe I said this to you before, and in this
+ letter; but I will not look.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. Morning. It snows terribly again; and 'tis mistaken, for I now want a
+ little good weather. I bid you good-morrow; and, if it clear up, get you
+ gone to poor Mrs. Walls, who has had a hard time of it, but is now pretty
+ well again. I am sorry it is a girl: the poor Archdeacon too, see how
+ simply he looked when they told him: what did it cost Stella to be gossip?
+ I'll rise; so, d'ye hear, let me see you at night; and do not stay late
+ out, and catch cold, sirrahs.&mdash;At night. It grew good weather, and I
+ got a good walk, and dined with Ford upon his Opera-day; but, now all his
+ wine is gone, I shall dine with him no more. I hope to send this letter
+ before I hear from MD, methinks there is&mdash;something great in doing
+ so, only I can't express where it lies; and, faith, this shall go by
+ Saturday, as sure as you're a rogue. Mrs. Edgworth was to set out but last
+ Monday; so you won't have your box so soon perhaps as this letter; but
+ Sterne told me since that it is safe at Chester, and that she will take
+ care of it. I'd give a guinea you had it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21. Morning. Faith, I hope it will be fair for me to walk into the City;
+ for I take all occasions of walking.&mdash;I should be plaguy busy at
+ Laracor if I were there now, cutting down willows, planting others,
+ scouring my canal, and every kind of thing. If Raymond goes over this
+ summer, you must submit, and make them a visit, that we may have another
+ eel and trout fishing; and that Stella may ride by, and see Presto in his
+ morning-gown in the garden, and so go up with Joe to the Hill of Bree, and
+ round by Scurlock's Town. O Lord, how I remember names! faith, it gives me
+ short sighs; therefore no more of that, if you love me. Good-morrow, I
+ will go rise like a gentleman; my pills say I must.&mdash;At night. Lady
+ Kerry sent to desire me to engage some lords about an affair she has in
+ their house here: I called to see her, but found she had already engaged
+ every lord I knew, and that there was no great difficulty in the matter;
+ and it rained like a dog; so I took coach, for want of better exercise,
+ and dined privately with a hang-dog in the City, and walked back in the
+ evening. The days are now long enough to walk in the Park after dinner;
+ and so I do whenever it is fair. This walking is a strange remedy: Mr.
+ Prior walks, to make himself fat, and I to bring myself down; he has
+ generally a cough, which he only calls a cold; we often walk round the
+ Park together. So I'll go sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22. It snowed all this morning prodigiously, and was some inches thick in
+ three or four hours. I dined with Mr. Lewis of the Secretary's office at
+ his lodgings: the chairmen that carried me squeezed a great fellow against
+ a wall, who wisely turned his back, and broke one of the side-glasses in a
+ thousand pieces. I fell a scolding, pretended I was like to be cut to
+ pieces, and made them set down the chair in the Park, while they picked
+ out the bits of glasses; and, when I paid them, I quarrelled still; so
+ they dared not grumble, and I came off for my fare; but I was plaguily
+ afraid they would have said, "God bless your honour, won't you give us
+ something for our glass?" Lewis and I were forming a project how I might
+ get three or four hundred pounds,(22) which I suppose may come to nothing.
+ I hope Smyth has brought you your palsy-drops. How does Stella do? I begin
+ more and more to desire to know. The three weeks since I had your last is
+ over within two days, and I will allow three for accidents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23. The snow is gone every bit, except the remainder of some great balls
+ made by the boys. Mr. Sterne was with me this morning about an affair he
+ has before the Treasury. That drab Mrs. Edgworth is not yet set out, but
+ will infallibly next Monday: and this is the third infallible Monday, and
+ pox take her! So you will have this letter first; and this shall go
+ to-morrow; and, if I have one from MD in that time, I will not answer it
+ till my next; only I will say, "Madam, I received your letter, and so, and
+ so." I dined to-day with my Mistress Butler,(23) who grows very
+ disagreeable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24. Morning. This letter certainly goes this evening, sure as you're
+ alive, young women, and then you will be so shamed that I have had none
+ from you; and, if I was to reckon like you, I would say, I were six
+ letters before you, for this is N.16, and I have had your N.10. But I
+ reckon you have received but fourteen, and have sent eleven. I think to go
+ to-day a Minister-of-State-hunting in the Court of Requests; for I have
+ something to say to Mr. Harley. And it is fine, cold, sunshiny weather; I
+ wish dear MD would walk this morning in your Stephen's Green; 'tis as good
+ as our Park, but not so large.(24) Faith, this summer we'll take a coach
+ for sixpence(25) to the Green Well, the two walks, and thence all the way
+ to Stoyte's.(26) My hearty service to Goody Stoyte and Catherine; and I
+ hope Mrs. Walls had a good time. How inconstant I am! I can't imagine I
+ was ever in love with her. Well, I'm going; what have you to say? I DO NOT
+ CARE HOW I WRITE NOW.(27) I don't design to write on this side; these few
+ lines are but so much more than your due; so I will write LARGE or small
+ as I please. O, faith, my hands are starving in bed; I believe it is a
+ hard frost. I must rise, and bid you good-bye, for I'll seal this letter
+ immediately, and carry it in my pocket, and put it into the post-office
+ with my own fair hands. Farewell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This letter is just a fortnight's journal to-day. Yes, and so it is, I'm
+ sure, says you, with your two eggs a penny.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lele, lele, lele.(28)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ O Lord, I am saying lele, lele, to myself, in all our little keys: and,
+ now you talk of keys, that dog Patrick broke the key-general of the chest
+ of drawers with six locks, and I have been so plagued to get a new one,
+ besides my good two shillings!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0020" id="link2H_4_0020">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 17.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, Feb. 24, 1710-11.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Now, young women, I gave in my sixteenth this evening. I dined with Ford
+ (it was his Opera-day) as usual; it is very convenient to me to do so, for
+ coming home early after a walk in the Park, which now the days will allow.
+ I called on the Secretary at his office, and he had forgot to give the
+ memorial about Bernage to the Duke of Argyle; but, two days ago, I met the
+ Duke, who desired I would give it him myself, which should have more power
+ with him than all the Ministry together, as he protested solemnly,
+ repeated it two or three times, and bid me count upon it. So that I verily
+ believe Bernage will be in a very good way to establish himself. I think I
+ can do no more for him at present, and there's an end of that; and so get
+ you gone to bed, for it is late.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25. The three weeks are out yesterday since I had your last, and so now I
+ will be expecting every day a pretty dear letter from my own MD, and hope
+ to hear that Stella has been much better in her head and eyes: my head
+ continues as it was, no fits, but a little disorder every day, which I can
+ easily bear, if it will not grow worse. I dined to-day with Mr. Secretary
+ St. John, on condition I might choose my company, which were Lord Rivers,
+ Lord Carteret, Sir Thomas Mansel,(1) and Mr. Lewis; I invited Masham,
+ Hill, Sir John Stanley, and George Granville, but they were engaged; and I
+ did it in revenge of his having such bad company when I dined with him
+ before; so we laughed, etc. And I ventured to go to church to-day, which I
+ have not done this month before. Can you send me such a good account of
+ Stella's health, pray now? Yes, I hope, and better too. We dined (says
+ you) at the Dean's, and played at cards till twelve, and there came in Mr.
+ French, and Dr. Travors, and Dr. Whittingham, and Mr. (I forget his name,
+ that I always tell Mrs. Walls of) the banker's son, a pox on him. And we
+ were so merry; I vow they are pure good company. But I lost a crown; for
+ you must know I had always hands tempting me to go out, but never took in
+ anything, and often two black aces without a manilio; was not that hard,
+ Presto? Hold your tongue, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26. I was this morning with Mr. Secretary about some business, and he
+ tells me that Colonel Fielding is now going to make Bernage his
+ captain-lieutenant, that is, a captain by commission, and the perquisites
+ of the company; but not captain's pay, only the first step to it. I
+ suppose he will like it; and the recommendation to the Duke of Argyle goes
+ on. And so trouble me no more about your Bernage; the jackanapes
+ understands what fair solicitors he has got, I warrant you. Sir Andrew
+ Fountaine and I dined, by invitation, with Mrs. Vanhomrigh. You say they
+ are of no consequence: why, they keep as good female company as I do male;
+ I see all the drabs of quality at this end of the town with them: I saw
+ two Lady Bettys(2) there this afternoon; the beauty of one, the
+ good-breeding and nature of t'other, and the wit of neither, would have
+ made a fine woman. Rare walking in the Park now: why don't you walk in the
+ Green of St. Stephen? The walks there are finer gravelled than the Mall.
+ What beasts the Irish women are, never to walk!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27. Darteneuf and I, and little Harrison the new Tatler, and Jervas the
+ painter, dined to-day with James,(3) I know not his other name, but it is
+ one of Darteneuf's dining-places, who is a true epicure. James is clerk of
+ the kitchen to the Queen, and has a little snug house at St. James's; and
+ we had the Queen's wine, and such very fine victuals that I could not eat
+ it. Three weeks and three days since my last letter from MD; rare doings!
+ why, truly we were so busy with poor Mrs. Walls, that indeed, Presto, we
+ could not write, we were afraid the poor woman would have died; and it
+ pitied us to see the Archdeacon, how concerned he was. The Dean never came
+ to see her but once; but now she is up again, and we go and sit with her
+ in the evenings. The child died the next day after it was born; and I
+ believe, between friends, she is not very sorry for it.&mdash;Indeed,
+ Presto, you are plaguy silly tonight, and han't guessed one word right;
+ for she and the child are both well, and it is a fine girl, likely to
+ live; and the Dean was godfather, and Mrs. Catherine and I were
+ godmothers; I was going to say Stoyte, but I think I have heard they don't
+ put maids and married women together; though I know not why I think so,
+ nor I don't care; what care I? but I must prate, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28. I walked to-day into the City for my health, and there dined; which I
+ always do when the weather is fair, and business permits, that I may be
+ under a necessity of taking a good walk, which is the best thing I can do
+ at present for my health. Some bookseller has raked up everything I writ,
+ and published it t'other day in one volume; but I know nothing of it,
+ 'twas without my knowledge or consent: it makes a four-shilling book, and
+ is called Miscellanies in Prose and Verse.(4) Tooke pretends he knows
+ nothing of it; but I doubt he is at the bottom. One must have patience
+ with these things; the best of it is, I shall be plagued no more. However,
+ I will bring a couple of them over with me for MD; perhaps you may desire
+ to see them. I hear they sell mightily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ March 1. Morning. I have been calling to Patrick to look in his almanac
+ for the day of the month; I did not know but it might be leap-year. The
+ almanac says 'tis the third after leap-year; and I always thought till
+ now, that every third year was leap-year. I am glad they come so seldom;
+ but I'm sure 'twas otherwise when I was a young man; I see times are
+ mightily changed since then.&mdash;Write to me, sirrahs; be sure do by the
+ time this side is done, and I'll keep t'other side for the answer: so I'll
+ go write to the Bishop of Clogher; good-morrow, sirrahs.&mdash;Night. I
+ dined to-day at Mrs. Vanhomrigh's, being a rainy day; and Lady Betty
+ Butler, knowing it, sent to let me know she expected my company in the
+ evening, where the Vans (so we call them) were to be. The Duchess(5) and
+ they do not go over this summer with the Duke; so I go to bed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. This rainy weather undoes me in coaches and chairs. I was traipsing
+ to-day with your Mr. Sterne, to go along with them to Moore,(6) and
+ recommend his business to the Treasury. Sterne tells me his dependence is
+ wholly on me; but I have absolutely refused to recommend it to Mr. Harley,
+ because I have troubled him lately so much with other folks' affairs; and
+ besides, to tell the truth, Mr. Harley told me he did not like Sterne's
+ business: however, I will serve him, because I suppose MD would have me.
+ But, in saying his dependence lies wholly on me, he lies, and is a fool. I
+ dined with Lord Abercorn, whose son Peasley(7) will be married at Easter
+ to ten thousand pounds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. I forgot to tell you that yesterday morning I was at Mr. Harley's
+ levee: he swore I came in spite, to see him among a parcel of fools. My
+ business was to desire I might let the Duke of Ormond know how the affair
+ stood of the First-Fruits. He promised to let him know it, and engaged me
+ to dine with him to-day. Every Saturday, Lord Keeper, Secretary St. John,
+ and I dine with him, and sometimes Lord Rivers; and they let in none else.
+ Patrick brought me some letters into the Park; among which one was from
+ Walls; and t'other, yes, faith, t'other was from our little MD, N.11. I
+ read the rest in the Park, and MD's in a chair as I went from St. James's
+ to Mr. Harley; and glad enough I was, faith, to read it, and see all
+ right. Oh, but I won't answer it these three or four days at least, or may
+ be sooner. An't I silly? faith, your letters would make a dog silly, if I
+ had a dog to be silly, but it must be a little dog.&mdash;I stayed with
+ Mr. Harley till past nine, where we had much discourse together after the
+ rest were gone; and I gave him very truly my opinion where he desired it.
+ He complained he was not very well, and has engaged me to dine with him
+ again on Monday. So I came home afoot, like a fine gentleman, to tell you
+ all this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. I dined to-day with Mr. Secretary St. John; and after dinner he had a
+ note from Mr. Harley, that he was much out of order.(8) Pray God preserve
+ his health! everything depends upon it. The Parliament at present cannot
+ go a step without him, nor the Queen neither. I long to be in Ireland; but
+ the Ministry beg me to stay: however, when this Parliament lurry(9) is
+ over, I will endeavour to steal away; by which time I hope the First-Fruit
+ business will be done. This kingdom is certainly ruined as much as was
+ ever any bankrupt merchant. We must have peace, let it be a bad or a good
+ one, though nobody dares talk of it. The nearer I look upon things, the
+ worse I like them. I believe the confederacy will soon break to pieces,
+ and our factions at home increase. The Ministry is upon a very narrow
+ bottom, and stand like an isthmus, between the Whigs on one side, and
+ violent Tories on the other. They are able seamen; but the tempest is too
+ great, the ship too rotten, and the crew all against them. Lord Somers has
+ been twice in the Queen's closet, once very lately; and your Duchess of
+ Somerset,(10) who now has the key, is a most insinuating woman; and I
+ believe they will endeavour to play the same game that has been played
+ against them.&mdash;I have told them of all this, which they know already,
+ but they cannot help it. They have cautioned the Queen so much against
+ being governed, that she observes it too much. I could talk till to-morrow
+ upon these things, but they make me melancholy. I could not but observe
+ that lately, after much conversation with Mr. Harley, though he is the
+ most fearless man alive, and the least apt to despond, he confessed to me
+ that uttering his mind to me gave him ease.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. Mr. Harley continues out of order, yet his affairs force him abroad: he
+ is subject to a sore throat, and was cupped last night: I sent and called
+ two or three times. I hear he is better this evening. I dined to-day in
+ the City with Dr. Freind at a third body's house, where I was to pass for
+ somebody else; and there was a plaguy silly jest carried on, that made me
+ sick of it. Our weather grows fine, and I will walk like camomile. And
+ pray walk you to your Dean's, or your Stoyte's, or your Manley's, or your
+ Walls'. But your new lodgings make you so proud, you will walk less than
+ ever. Come, let me go to bed, sirrahs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. Mr. Harley's going out yesterday has put him a little backwards. I
+ called twice, and sent, for I am in pain for him. Ford caught me, and made
+ me dine with him on his Opera-day; so I brought Mr. Lewis with me, and sat
+ with him till six. I have not seen Mr. Addison these three weeks; all our
+ friendship is over. I go to no Coffee-house. I presented a parson of the
+ Bishop of Clogher's, one Richardson,(11) to the Duke of Ormond to-day: he
+ is translating prayers and sermons into Irish, and has a project about
+ instructing the Irish in the Protestant religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. Morning. Faith, a little would make me, I could find in my heart, if it
+ were not for one thing, I have a good mind, if I had not something else to
+ do, I would answer your dear saucy letter. O, Lord, I am going awry with
+ writing in bed. O, faith, but I must answer it, or I shan't have room, for
+ it must go on Saturday; and don't think I will fill the third side, I an't
+ come to that yet, young women. Well then, as for your Bernage, I have said
+ enough: I writ to him last week.&mdash;Turn over that leaf. Now, what says
+ MD to the world to come? I tell you, Madam Stella, my head is a great deal
+ better, and I hope will keep so. How came yours to be fifteen days coming,
+ and you had my fifteenth in seven? Answer me that, rogues. Your being with
+ Goody Walls is excuse enough: I find I was mistaken in the sex, 'tis a
+ boy.(12) Yes, I understand your cypher, and Stella guesses right, as she
+ always does. He(13) gave me al bsadnuk lboinlpl dfaonr ufainf btoy
+ dpionufnad,(14) which I sent him again by Mr. Lewis, to whom I writ a very
+ complaining letter that was showed him; and so the matter ended. He told
+ me he had a quarrel with me; I said I had another with him, and we
+ returned to our friendship, and I should think he loves me as well as a
+ great Minister can love a man in so short a time. Did not I do right? I am
+ glad at heart you have got your palsy-water;(15) pray God Almighty it may
+ do my dearest little Stella good! I suppose Mrs. Edgworth set out last
+ Monday se'ennight. Yes, I do read the Examiners, and they are written very
+ finely, as you judge. I do not think they are too severe on the Duke;(16)
+ they only tax him of avarice, and his avarice has ruined us. You may count
+ upon all things in them to be true. The author has said it is not Prior,
+ but perhaps it may be Atterbury.&mdash;Now, Madam Dingley, says she, 'tis
+ fine weather, says she; yes, says she, and we have got to our new
+ lodgings. I compute you ought to save eight pounds by being in the others
+ five months; and you have no more done it than eight thousand. I am glad
+ you are rid of that squinting, blinking Frenchman. I will give you a bill
+ on Parvisol for five pounds for the half-year. And must I go on at four
+ shillings a week, and neither eat nor drink for it? Who the Devil said
+ Atterbury and your Dean were alike? I never saw your Chancellor, nor his
+ chaplain. The latter has a good deal of learning, and is a well-wisher to
+ be an author: your Chancellor is an excellent man. As for Patrick's bird,
+ he bought him for his tameness, and is grown the wildest I ever saw. His
+ wings have been quilled thrice, and are now up again: he will be able to
+ fly after us to Ireland, if he be willing.&mdash;Yes, Mrs. Stella, Dingley
+ writes more like Presto than you; for all you superscribed the letter, as
+ who should say, Why should not I write like our Presto as well as Dingley?
+ You with your awkward SS;(17) cannot you write them thus, SS? No, but
+ always SSS. Spiteful sluts, to affront Presto's writing; as that when you
+ shut your eyes you write most like Presto. I know the time when I did not
+ write to you half so plain as I do now; but I take pity on you both. I am
+ very much concerned for Mrs. Walls's eyes. Walls says nothing of it to me
+ in his letter dated after yours. You say, "If she recovers, she may lose
+ her sight." I hope she is in no danger of her life. Yes, Ford is as sober
+ as I please: I use him to walk with me as an easy companion, always ready
+ for what I please, when I am weary of business and Ministers. I don't go
+ to a Coffee-house twice a month. I am very regular in going to sleep
+ before eleven.&mdash;And so you say that Stella is a pretty girl; and so
+ she be, and methinks I see her just now as handsome as the day is long. Do
+ you know what? when I am writing in our language, I make up my mouth just
+ as if I was speaking it. I caught myself at it just now. And I suppose
+ Dingley is so fair and so fresh as a lass in May, and has her health, and
+ no spleen.&mdash;In your account you sent do you reckon as usual from the
+ 1st of November(18) was twelvemonth? Poor Stella, will not Dingley leave
+ her a little daylight to write to Presto? Well, well, we'll have daylight
+ shortly, spite of her teeth; and zoo(19) must cly Lele and Hele, and Hele
+ aden. Must loo mimitate Pdfr, pay? Iss, and so la shall. And so lele's fol
+ ee rettle. Dood-mollow.&mdash;At night. Mrs. Barton sent this morning to
+ invite me to dinner; and there I dined, just in that genteel manner that
+ MD used when they would treat some better sort of body than usual.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. O dear MD, my heart is almost broken. You will hear the thing before
+ this comes to you. I writ a full account of it this night to the
+ Archbishop of Dublin; and the Dean may tell you the particulars from the
+ Archbishop. I was in a sorry way to write, but thought it might be proper
+ to send a true account of the fact; for you will hear a thousand lying
+ circumstances. It is of Mr. Harley's being stabbed this afternoon, at
+ three o'clock, at a Committee of the Council. I was playing Lady Catharine
+ Morris's(20) cards, where I dined, when young Arundel(21) came in with the
+ story. I ran away immediately to the Secretary, which was in my way: no
+ one was at home. I met Mrs. St. John in her chair; she had heard it
+ imperfectly. I took a chair to Mr. Harley, who was asleep, and they hope
+ in no danger; but he has been out of order, and was so when he came abroad
+ to-day, and it may put him in a fever: I am in mortal pain for him. That
+ desperate French villain, Marquis de Guiscard,(22) stabbed Mr. Harley.
+ Guiscard was taken up by Mr. Secretary St. John's warrant for high
+ treason, and brought before the Lords to be examined; there he stabbed Mr.
+ Harley. I have told all the particulars already to the Archbishop. I have
+ now, at nine, sent again, and they tell me he is in a fair way. Pray
+ pardon my distraction; I now think of all his kindness to me.&mdash;The
+ poor creature now lies stabbed in his bed by a desperate French Popish
+ villain. Good-night, and God preserve you both, and pity me; I want it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. Morning; seven, in bed. Patrick is just come from Mr. Harley's. He
+ slept well till four; the surgeon sat(23) up with him: he is asleep again:
+ he felt a pain in his wound when he waked: they apprehend him in no
+ danger. This account the surgeon left with the porter, to tell people that
+ send. Pray God preserve him. I am rising, and going to Mr. Secretary St.
+ John. They say Guiscard will die with the wounds Mr. St. John and the rest
+ gave him. I shall tell you more at night.&mdash;Night. Mr. Harley still
+ continues on the mending hand; but he rested ill last night, and felt
+ pain. I was early with the Secretary this morning, and I dined with him,
+ and he told me several particularities of this accident, too long to
+ relate now. Mr. Harley is still mending this evening, but not at all out
+ of danger; and till then I can have no peace. Good-night, etc., and pity
+ Presto.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. Mr. Harley was restless last night; but he has no fever, and the hopes
+ of his mending increase. I had a letter from Mr. Walls, and one from Mr.
+ Bernage. I will answer them here, not having time to write. Mr. Walls
+ writes about three things. First, about a hundred pounds from Dr. Raymond,
+ of which I hear nothing, and it is now too late. Secondly, about Mr.
+ Clements:(24) I can do nothing in it, because I am not to mention Mr.
+ Pratt; and I cannot recommend without knowing Mr. Pratt's objections,
+ whose relation Clements is, and who brought him into the place. The third
+ is about my being godfather to the child:(25) that is in my power, and
+ (since there is no remedy) will submit. I wish you could hinder it; but if
+ it can't be helped, pay what you think proper, and get the Provost to
+ stand for me, and let his Christian name be Harley, in honour of my
+ friend, now lying stabbed and doubtful of his life. As for Bernage, he
+ writes me word that his colonel has offered to make him captain-lieutenant
+ for a hundred pounds. He was such a fool to offer him money without
+ writing to me till it was done, though I have had a dozen letters from
+ him; and then he desires I would say nothing of this, for fear his colonel
+ should be angry. People are mad. What can I do? I engaged Colonel Disney,
+ who was one of his solicitors to the Secretary, and then told him the
+ story. He assured me that Fielding (Bernage's colonel) said he might have
+ got that sum; but, on account of those great recommendations he had, would
+ give it him for nothing: and I would have Bernage write him a letter of
+ thanks, as of a thing given him for nothing, upon recommendations, etc.
+ Disney tells me he will again speak to Fielding, and clear up this matter;
+ then I will write to Bernage. A pox on him for promising money till I had
+ it promised to me; and then making it such a ticklish point, that one
+ cannot expostulate with the colonel upon it: but let him do as I say, and
+ there is an end. I engaged the Secretary of State in it; and am sure it
+ was meant a kindness to me, and that no money should be given, and a
+ hundred pounds is too much in a Smithfield bargain,(26) as a major-general
+ told me, whose opinion I asked. I am now hurried, and can say no more.
+ Farewell, etc. etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How shall I superscribe to your new lodgings, pray, madams? Tell me but
+ that, impudence and saucy-face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Are not you sauceboxes to write "lele"(27) like Presto? O poor Presto!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Harley is better to-night, that makes me so pert, you saucy Gog and
+ Magog.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0021" id="link2H_4_0021">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 18.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, March 10, 1710-11.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Pretty little MD must expect little from me till Mr. Harley is out of
+ danger. We hope he is so now; but I am subject to fear for my friends. He
+ has a head full of the whole business of the nation, was out of order when
+ the villain stabbed him, and had a cruel contusion by the second blow. But
+ all goes on well yet. Mr. Ford and I dined with Mr. Lewis, and we hope the
+ best.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. This morning Mr. Secretary and I met at Court, where he went to the
+ Queen, who is out of order, and aguish: I doubt the worse for this
+ accident to Mr. Harley. We went together to his house, and his wound looks
+ well, and he is not feverish at all, and I think it is foolish in me to be
+ so much in pain as I am. I had the penknife in my hand, which is broken
+ within a quarter of an inch of the handle. I have a mind to write and
+ publish an account of all the particularities of this fact:(1) it will be
+ very curious, and I would do it when Mr. Harley is past danger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. We have been in terrible pain to-day about Mr. Harley, who never slept
+ last night, and has been very feverish. But this evening I called there;
+ and young Mr. Harley (his only son) tells me he is now much better, and
+ was then asleep. They let nobody see him, and that is perfectly right. The
+ Parliament cannot go on till he is well, and are forced to adjourn their
+ money businesses, which none but he can help them in. Pray God preserve
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. Mr. Harley is better to-day, slept well all night, and we are a little
+ out of our fears. I send and call three or four times every day. I went
+ into the City for a walk, and dined there with a private man; and coming
+ home this evening, broke my shin in the Strand over a tub of sand left
+ just in the way. I got home dirty enough, and went straight to bed, where
+ I have been cooking it with gold-beater's skin, and have been peevish
+ enough with Patrick, who was near an hour bringing a rag from next door.
+ It is my right shin, where never any humour fell when t'other used to
+ swell; so I apprehend it less: however, I shall not stir till 'tis well,
+ which I reckon will be in a week. I am very careful in these sort of
+ things; but I wish I had Mrs. J&mdash;&mdash;'s water:(2) she is out of
+ town, and I must make a shift with alum. I will dine with Mrs. Vanhomrigh
+ till I am well, who lives but five doors off; and that I may venture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. My journals are like to be very diverting, now I cannot stir abroad,
+ between accounts of Mr. Harley's mending, and of my broken shin. I just
+ walked to my neighbour Vanhomrigh at two, and came away at six, when
+ little Harrison the Tatler came to me, and begged me to dictate a paper to
+ him, which I was forced in charity to do. Mr. Harley still mends; and I
+ hope in a day or two to trouble you no more with him, nor with my shin. Go
+ to bed and sleep, sirrahs, that you may rise to-morrow and walk to
+ Donnybrook, and lose your money with Stoyte and the Dean; do so, dear
+ little rogues, and drink Presto's health. O pray, don't you drink Presto's
+ health sometimes with your deans, and your Stoytes, and your Walls, and
+ your Manleys, and your everybodies, pray now? I drink MD's to myself a
+ hundred thousand times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. I was this morning at Mr. Secretary St. John's for all my shin; and he
+ has given me for young Harrison the Tatler the prettiest employment in
+ Europe; secretary to my Lord Raby,(3) who is to be Ambassador
+ Extraordinary at the Hague, where all the great affairs will be concerted;
+ so we shall lose the Tatlers in a fortnight. I will send Harrison
+ to-morrow morning to thank the Secretary. Poor Biddy Floyd(4) has got the
+ smallpox. I called this morning to see Lady Betty Germaine, and when she
+ told me so, I fairly took my leave. I have the luck of it;(5) for about
+ ten days ago I was to see Lord Carteret;(6) and my lady was entertaining
+ me with telling of a young lady, a cousin, who was then ill in the house
+ of the smallpox, and is since dead: it was near Lady Betty's, and I fancy
+ Biddy took the fright by it. I dined with Mr. Secretary; and a physician
+ came in just from Guiscard, who tells us he is dying of his wounds, and
+ can hardly live till to-morrow. A poor wench that Guiscard kept, sent him
+ a bottle of sack; but the keeper would not let him touch it, for fear it
+ was poison. He had two quarts of old clotted blood come out of his side
+ to-day, and is delirious. I am sorry he is dying; for they had found out a
+ way to hang him. He certainly had an intention to murder the Queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. I have made but little progress in this letter for so many days,
+ thanks to Guiscard and Mr. Harley; and it would be endless to tell you all
+ the particulars of that odious fact. I do not yet hear that Guiscard is
+ dead, but they say 'tis impossible he should recover. I walked too much
+ yesterday for a man with a broken shin; to-day I rested, and went no
+ farther than Mrs. Vanhomrigh's, where I dined; and Lady Betty Butler
+ coming in about six, I was forced in good manners to sit with her till
+ nine; then I came home, and Mr. Ford came in to visit my shin, and sat
+ with me till eleven: so I have been very idle and naughty. It vexes me to
+ the pluck(7) that I should lose walking this delicious day. Have you seen
+ the Spectator(8) yet, a paper that comes out every day? 'Tis written by
+ Mr. Steele, who seems to have gathered new life, and have a new fund of
+ wit; it is in the same nature as his Tatlers, and they have all of them
+ had something pretty. I believe Addison and he club. I never see them; and
+ I plainly told Mr. Harley and Mr. St. John, ten days ago, before my Lord
+ Keeper and Lord Rivers, that I had been foolish enough to spend my credit
+ with them in favour of Addison and Steele; but that I would engage and
+ promise never to say one word in their behalf, having been used so ill for
+ what I had already done.&mdash;So, now I am got into the way of prating
+ again, there will be no quiet for me.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ When Presto begins to prate,
+ Give him a rap upon the pate.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ O Lord, how I blot! it is time to leave off, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. Guiscard died this morning at two; and the coroner's inquest have
+ found that he was killed by bruises received from a messenger, so to clear
+ the Cabinet Councillors from whom he received his wounds. I had a letter
+ from Raymond, who cannot hear of your box; but I hope you have it before
+ this comes to your hands. I dined to-day with Mr. Lewis of the Secretary's
+ office. Mr. Harley has abundance of extravasated blood comes from his
+ breast out of his wound, and will not be well so soon as we expected. I
+ had something to say, but cannot call it to mind. (What was it?)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. I was to-day at Court to look for the Duke of Argyle, and gave him the
+ memorial about Bernage. The Duke goes with the first fair wind. I could
+ not find him, but I have given the memorial to another to give him; and,
+ however, it shall be sent after him. Bernage has made a blunder in
+ offering money to his colonel without my advice; however, he is made
+ captain-lieutenant, only he must recruit the company, which will cost him
+ forty pounds, and that is cheaper than an hundred. I dined to-day with Mr.
+ Secretary St. John, and stayed till seven, but would not drink his
+ champagne and burgundy, for fear of the gout. My shin mends, but is not
+ well. I hope it will by the time I send this letter, next Saturday.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. I went to-day into the City, but in a coach, and sossed(9) up my leg
+ on the seat; and as I came home, I went to see poor Charles Barnard's(10)
+ books, which are to be sold by auction, and I itch to lay out nine or ten
+ pounds for some fine editions of fine authors. But 'tis too far, and I
+ shall let it slip, as I usually do all such opportunities. I dined in a
+ coffee-house with Stratford upon chops and some of his wine. Where did MD
+ dine? Why, poor MD dined at home to-day, because of the Archbishop, and
+ they could not go abroad, and had a breast of mutton and a pint of wine. I
+ hope Mrs. Walls mends; and pray give me an account what sort of godfather
+ I made, and whether I behaved myself handsomely. The Duke of Argyle is
+ gone; and whether he has my memorial, I know not, till I see Dr.
+ Arbuthnot,(11) to whom I gave it. That hard name belongs to a Scotch
+ doctor, an acquaintance of the Duke's and me; Stella can't pronounce it.
+ Oh that we were at Laracor this fine day! the willows begin to peep, and
+ the quicks to bud. My dream is out: I was a-dreamed last night that I ate
+ ripe cherries.&mdash;And now they begin to catch the pikes, and will
+ shortly the trouts (pox on these Ministers!)&mdash;and I would fain know
+ whether the floods were ever so high as to get over the holly bank or the
+ river walk; if so, then all my pikes are gone; but I hope not. Why don't
+ you ask Parvisol these things, sirrahs? And then my canal, and trouts, and
+ whether the bottom be fine and clear? But harkee, ought not Parvisol to
+ pay in my last year's rents and arrears out of his hands? I am thinking,
+ if either of you have heads to take his accounts, it should be paid in to
+ you; otherwise to Mr. Walls. I will write an order on t'other side; and do
+ as you will. Here's a world of business; but I must go sleep, I'm drowsy;
+ and so goodnight, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. This sore shin ruins me in coach-hire; no less than two shillings
+ to-day going and coming from the City, where I dined with one you never
+ heard of, and passed an insipid day. I writ this post to Bernage, with the
+ account I told you above. I hope he will like it; 'tis his own fault, or
+ it would have been better. I reckon your next letter will be full of Mr.
+ Harley's stabbing. He still mends, but abundance of extravasated blood has
+ come out of the wound: he keeps his bed, and sees nobody. The Speaker's
+ eldest son(12) is just dead of the smallpox, and the House is adjourned a
+ week, to give him time to wipe off his tears. I think it very handsomely
+ done; but I believe one reason is, that they want Mr. Harley so much.
+ Biddy Floyd is like to do well: and so go to your Dean's, and roast his
+ oranges, and lose your money, do so, you saucy sluts. Stella, you lost
+ three shillings and fourpence t'other night at Stoyte's, yes, you did, and
+ Presto stood in a corner, and saw you all the while, and then stole away.
+ I dream very often I am in Ireland, and that I have left my clothes and
+ things behind me, and have not taken leave of anybody; and that the
+ Ministry expect me tomorrow, and such nonsense.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21. I would not for a guinea have a letter from you till this goes; and go
+ it shall on Saturday, faith. I dined with Mrs. Vanhomrigh, to save my
+ shin, and then went on some business to the Secretary, and he was not at
+ home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22. Yesterday was a short day's journal: but what care I? what cares saucy
+ Presto? Darteneuf(13) invited me to dinner to-day. Do not you know
+ Darteneuf? That's the man that knows everything, and that everybody knows;
+ and that knows where a knot of rabble are going on a holiday, and when
+ they were there last: and then I went to the Coffee-house. My shin mends,
+ but is not quite healed: I ought to keep it up, but I don't; I e'en let it
+ go as it comes. Pox take Parvisol and his watch! If I do not receive the
+ ten-pound bill I am to get towards it, I will neither receive watch nor
+ chain; so let Parvisol know.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23. I this day appointed the Duke of Ormond to meet him at Ned
+ Southwell's, about an affair of printing Irish Prayer-Books, etc.,(14) but
+ the Duke never came. There Southwell had letters that two packets are
+ taken; so if MD writ then, the letters are gone; for they are packets
+ coming hither. Mr. Harley is not yet well, but his extravasated blood
+ continues, and I doubt he will not be quite well in a good while: I find
+ you have heard of the fact by Southwell's letters from Ireland: what do
+ you think of it? I dined with Sir John Perceval,(15) and saw his lady
+ sitting in the bed, in the forms of a lying-in woman; and coming home my
+ sore shin itched, and I forgot what it was, and rubbed off the scab, and
+ blood came; but I am now got into bed, and have put on alum curd, and it
+ is almost well. Lord Rivers told me yesterday a piece of bad news, as a
+ secret, that the Pretender is going to be married to the Duke of Savoy's
+ daughter.(16) 'Tis very bad if it be true. We were walking in the Mall
+ with some Scotch lords, and he could not tell it until they were gone, and
+ he bade me tell it to none but the Secretary of State and MD. This goes
+ tomorrow, and I have no room but to bid my dearest little MD good-night.
+ 24. I will now seal up this letter, and send it; for I reckon to have none
+ from you ('tis morning now) between this and night; and I will put it in
+ the post with my own hands. I am going out in great haste; so farewell,
+ etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0022" id="link2H_4_0022">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 19.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, March 24, 1710-11.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ It was a little cross in Presto not to send to-day to the Coffee-house to
+ see whether there was a letter from MD before I sent away mine; but,
+ faith, I did it on purpose, because I would scorn to answer two letters of
+ yours successively. This way of journal is the worst in the world for
+ writing of news, unless one does it the last day; and so I will observe
+ henceforward, if there be any politics or stuff worth sending. My shin
+ mends in spite of the scratching last night. I dined to-day at Ned
+ Southwell's with the Bishop of Ossory(1) and a parcel of Irish gentlemen.
+ Have you yet seen any of the Spectators? Just three weeks to-day since I
+ had your last, N.11. I am afraid I have lost one by the packet that was
+ taken; that will vex me, considering the pains MD take to write,
+ especially poor pretty Stella, and her weak eyes. God bless them and the
+ owner, and send them well, and little me together, I hope ere long. This
+ illness of Mr. Harley puts everything backwards, and he is still down, and
+ like to be so, by that extravasated blood which comes from his breast to
+ the wound: it was by the second blow Guiscard gave him after the penknife
+ was broken. I am shocked at that villainy whenever I think of it. Biddy
+ Floyd is past danger, but will lose all her beauty: she had them mighty
+ thick, especially about her nose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25. Morning. I wish you a merry New Year; this is the first day of the
+ year, you know, with us, and 'tis Lady-day. I must rise and go to my Lord
+ Keeper: it is not shaving-day to-day, so I shall be early. I am to dine
+ with Mr. Secretary St. John. Good-morrow, my mistresses both, good-morrow.
+ Stella will be peeping out of her room at Mrs. De Caudres'(2) down upon
+ the folks as they come from church; and there comes Mrs. Proby,(3) and
+ that is my Lady Southwell,(4) and there is Lady Betty Rochfort.(5) I long
+ to hear how you are settled in your new lodgings. I wish I were rid of my
+ old ones, and that Mrs. Brent could contrive to put up my books in boxes,
+ and lodge them in some safe place, and you keep my papers of importance.
+ But I must rise, I tell you.&mdash;At night. So I visited and dined as I
+ told you, and what of that? We have let Guiscard be buried at last, after
+ showing him pickled in a trough this fortnight for twopence apiece: and
+ the fellow that showed would point to his body, and, "See, gentlemen, this
+ is the wound that was given him by his Grace the Duke of Ormond; and this
+ is the wound," etc., and then the show was over, and another set of rabble
+ came in. 'Tis hard our laws would not suffer us to hang his body in
+ chains, because he was not tried; and in the eye of our law every man is
+ innocent till then.&mdash;Mr. Harley is still very weak, and never out of
+ bed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26. This was a most delicious day; and my shin being past danger, I walked
+ like lightning above two hours in the Park. We have generally one fair
+ day, and then a great deal of rain for three or four days together. All
+ things are at a stop in Parliament for want of Mr. Harley; they cannot
+ stir an inch without him in their most material affairs: and we fear, by
+ the caprice of Radcliffe, who will admit none but his own surgeon,(6) he
+ has not been well looked after. I dined at an alehouse with Mr. Lewis, but
+ had his wine. Don't you begin to see the flowers and blossoms of the
+ field? How busy should I be now at Laracor! No news of your box? I hope
+ you have it, and are this minute drinking the chocolate, and that the
+ smell of the Brazil tobacco has not affected it. I would be glad to know
+ whether you like it, because I would send you more by people that are now
+ every day thinking of going to Ireland; therefore pray tell me, and tell
+ me soon: and I will have the strong box.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27. A rainy, wretched, scurvy day from morning till night: and my
+ neighbour Vanhomrigh invited me to dine with them and this evening I
+ passed at Mr. Prior's with Dr. Freind; and 'tis now past twelve, so I must
+ go sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28. Morning. O, faith, you're an impudent saucy couple of sluttikins for
+ presuming to write so soon, said I to myself this morning; who knows but
+ there may be a letter from MD at the Coffee-house? Well, you must know,
+ and so, I just now sent Patrick, and he brought me three letters, but not
+ one from MD, no indeed, for I read all the superscriptions; and not one
+ from MD. One I opened, it was from the Archbishop;(7) t'other I opened, it
+ was from Staunton;(8) the third I took, and looked at the hand. Whose hand
+ is this? says I; yes, says I, whose hand is this? Then there was wax
+ between the folds; then I began to suspect; then I peeped; faith, it was
+ Walls's hand after all: then I opened it in a rage, and then it was little
+ MD's hand, dear, little, pretty, charming MD's sweet hand again. O Lord,
+ an't here a clutter and a stir, and a bustle? never saw the like. Faith, I
+ believe yours lay some days at the post-office, and that it came before my
+ eighteenth went, but that I did not expect it, and I hardly ever go there.
+ Well, and so you think I'll answer this letter now; no, faith, and so I
+ won't. I'll make you wait, young women; but I'll inquire immediately about
+ poor Dingley's exchequer trangum.(9) What, is that Vedel again a soldier?
+ was he broke? I'll put it in Ben Tooke's hand. I hope Vedel could not sell
+ it.&mdash;At night. Vedel, Vedel, poh, pox, I think it is Vedeau;(10) ay,
+ Vedeau, now I have it; let me see, do you name him in yours? Yes, Mr. John
+ Vedeau is the brother; but where does this brother live? I'll inquire.
+ This was a fast-day for the public; so I dined late with Sir Matthew
+ Dudley, whom I have not been with a great while. He is one of those that
+ must lose his employment whenever the great shake comes; and I can't
+ contribute to keep him in, though I have dropped words in his favour to
+ the Ministry; but he is too violent a Whig, and friend to the Lord
+ Treasurer,(11) to stay in. 'Tis odd to think how long they let those
+ people keep their places; but the reason is, they have not enough to
+ satisfy all expecters, and so they keep them all in hopes, that they may
+ be good boys in the meantime; and thus the old ones hold in still. The
+ Comptroller(12) told me that there are eight people expect his staff. I
+ walked after dinner to-day round the Park. What, do I write politics to
+ little young women? Hold your tongue, and go to your Dean's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29. Morning. If this be a fine day, I will walk into the City, and see
+ Charles Barnard's library. What care I for your letter, saucy N.12? I will
+ say nothing to it yet: faith, I believe this will be full before its time,
+ and then go it must. I will always write once a fortnight; and if it goes
+ sooner by filling sooner, why, then there is so much clear gain. Morrow,
+ morrow, rogues and lasses both, I can't lie scribbling here in bed for
+ your play; I must rise, and so morrow again.&mdash;At night. Your friend
+ Montgomery and his sister are here, as I am told by Patrick. I have seen
+ him often, but take no notice of him: he is grown very ugly and pimpled.
+ They tell me he is a gamester, and wins money.&mdash;How could I help it,
+ pray? Patrick snuffed the candle too short, and the grease ran down upon
+ the paper.(13) It an't my fault, 'tis Patrick's fault; pray now don't
+ blame Presto. I walked today in the City, and dined at a private house,
+ and went to see the auction of poor Charles Barnard's books; they were in
+ the middle of the physic books, so I bought none; and they are so dear, I
+ believe I shall buy none, and there is an end; and go to Stoyte's, and
+ I'll go sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30. Morning. This is Good Friday, you must know; and I must rise and go to
+ Mr. Secretary about some business, and Mrs. Vanhomrigh desires me to
+ breakfast with her, because she is to intercede for Patrick, who is so
+ often drunk and quarrelsome in the house, that I was resolved to send him
+ over; but he knows all the places where I send, and is so used to my ways,
+ that it would be inconvenient to me; but when I come to Ireland, I will
+ discharge him.(14) Sir Thomas Mansel,(15) one of the Lords of the
+ Treasury, setting me down at my door to-day, saw Patrick, and swore he was
+ a Teague-lander.(16) I am so used to his face, I never observed it, but
+ thought him a pretty fellow. Sir Andrew Fountaine and I supped this
+ fast-day with Mrs. Vanhomrigh. We were afraid Mr. Harley's wound would
+ turn to a fistula; but we think the danger is now past. He rises every
+ day, and walks about his room, and we hope he will be out in a fortnight.
+ Prior showed me a handsome paper of verses he has writ on Mr. Harley's
+ accident:(17) they are not out; I will send them to you, if he will give
+ me a copy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 31. Morning. What shall we do to make April fools this year, now it
+ happens on Sunday? Patrick brings word that Mr. Harley still mends, and is
+ up every day. I design to see him in a few days: and he brings me word too
+ that he has found out Vedeau's brother's shop: I shall call there in a day
+ or two. It seems the wife lodges next door to the brother. I doubt the
+ scoundrel was broke, and got a commission, or perhaps is a volunteer
+ gentleman, and expects to get one by his valour. Morrow, sirrahs, let me
+ rise.&mdash;At night. I dined to-day with Sir Thomas Mansel. We were
+ walking in the Park, and Mr. Lewis came to us. Mansel asked where we
+ dined. We said, "Together." He said, we should dine with him, only his
+ wife(18) desired him to bring nobody, because she had only a leg of
+ mutton. I said I would dine with him to choose; but he would send a
+ servant to order a plate or two: yet this man has ten thousand pounds a
+ year in land, and is a Lord of the Treasury, and is not covetous neither,
+ but runs out merely by slattering(19) and negligence. The worst dinner I
+ ever saw at the Dean's was better: but so it is with abundance of people
+ here. I called at night at Mr. Harley's, who begins to walk in his room
+ with a stick, but is mighty weak.&mdash;See how much I have lost with that
+ ugly grease.(20) 'Tis your fault, pray; and I'll go to bed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ April 1. The Duke of Buckingham's house fell down last night with an
+ earthquake, and is half swallowed up; won't you go and see it?&mdash;An
+ April fool, an April fool, oh ho, young women. Well, don't be angry. I
+ will make you an April fool no more till the next time; we had no sport
+ here, because it is Sunday, and Easter Sunday. I dined with the Secretary,
+ who seemed terribly down and melancholy, which Mr. Prior and Lewis
+ observed as well as I: perhaps something is gone wrong; perhaps there is
+ nothing in it. God bless my own dearest MD, and all is well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. We have such windy weather, 'tis troublesome walking, yet all the
+ rabble have got into our Park these Easter holidays. I am plagued with one
+ Richardson, an Irish parson, and his project of printing Irish Bibles,
+ etc., to make you Christians in that country: I befriend him what I can,
+ on account of the Archbishop and Bishop of Clogher.&mdash;But what
+ business have I to meddle, etc. Do not you remember that, sirrah Stella?
+ what was that about, when you thought I was meddling with something that
+ was not my business? O, faith, you are an impudent slut, I remember your
+ doings, I'll never forget you as long as I live. Lewis and I dined
+ together at his lodgings. But where's the answer to this letter of MD's?
+ O, faith, Presto, you must think of that. Time enough, says saucy Presto.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. I was this morning to see Mrs. Barton: I love her better than anybody
+ here, and see her seldomer. Why, really now, so it often happens in the
+ world, that where one loves a body best&mdash;pshah, pshah, you are so
+ silly with your moral observations. Well, but she told me a very good
+ story. An old gentlewoman died here two months ago, and left in her will,
+ to have eight men and eight maids bearers, who should have two guineas
+ apiece, ten guineas to the parson for a sermon, and two guineas to the
+ clerk. But bearers, parson, and clerk must be all true virgins; and not to
+ be admitted till they took their oaths of virginity: so the poor woman
+ still lies unburied, and so must do till the general resurrection.&mdash;I
+ called at Mr. Secretary's, to see what the D&mdash;&mdash; ailed him on
+ Sunday. I made him a very proper speech; told him I observed he was much
+ out of temper; that I did not expect he would tell me the cause, but would
+ be glad to see he was in better; and one thing I warned him of, never to
+ appear cold to me, for I would not be treated like a schoolboy; that I had
+ felt too much of that in my life already (meaning from Sir William
+ Temple); that I expected every great Minister who honoured me with his
+ acquaintance, if he heard or saw anything to my disadvantage, would let me
+ know it in plain words, and not put me in pain to guess by the change or
+ coldness of his countenance or behaviour; for it was what I would hardly
+ bear from a crowned head, and I thought no subject's favour was worth it;
+ and that I designed to let my Lord Keeper(21) and Mr. Harley know the same
+ thing, that they might use me accordingly. He took all right; said I had
+ reason; vowed nothing ailed him but sitting up whole nights at business,
+ and one night at drinking; would have had me dine with him and Mrs.
+ Masham's brother, to make up matters; but I would not. I don't know, but I
+ would not. But indeed I was engaged with my old friend Rollinson;(22) you
+ never heard of him before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. I sometimes look a line or two back, and see plaguy mistakes of the
+ pen; how do you get over them? You are puzzled sometimes. Why, I think
+ what I said to Mr. Secretary was right. Don't you remember how I used to
+ be in pain when Sir William Temple would look cold and out of humour for
+ three or four days, and I used to suspect a hundred reasons? I have
+ plucked up my spirit since then, faith; he spoilt a fine gentleman. I
+ dined with my neighbour Vanhomrigh, and MD, poor MD, at home on a loin of
+ mutton and half a pint of wine, and the mutton was raw, poor Stella could
+ not eat, poor dear rogue, and Dingley was so vexed; but we will dine at
+ Stoyte's to-morrow. Mr. Harley promised to see me in a day or two, so I
+ called this evening; but his son and others were abroad, and he asleep, so
+ I came away, and found out Mrs. Vedeau. She drew out a letter from
+ Dingley, and said she would get a friend to receive the money. I told her
+ I would employ Mr. Tooke in it henceforward. Her husband bought a
+ lieutenancy of foot, and is gone to Portugal. He sold his share of the
+ shop to his brother, and put out the money to maintain her, all but what
+ bought the commission. She lodges within two doors of her brother. She
+ told me it made her very melancholy to change her manner of life thus, but
+ trade was dead, etc. She says she will write to you soon. I design to
+ engage Ben Tooke, and then receive the parchment from her.&mdash;I gave
+ Mr. Dopping a copy of Prior's verses on Mr. Harley; he sent them yesterday
+ to Ireland, so go look for them, for I won't be at the trouble to
+ transcribe them here. They will be printed in a day or two. Give my hearty
+ service to Stoyte and Catherine: upon my word I love them dearly, and
+ desire you will tell them so: pray desire Goody Stoyte not to let Mrs.
+ Walls and Mrs. Johnson cheat her of her money at ombre, but assure her
+ from me that she is a bungler. Dine with her to-day, and tell her so, and
+ drink my health, and good voyage, and speedy return, and so you're a
+ rogue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. Morning. Now let us proceed to examine a saucy letter from one Madam
+ MD.&mdash;God Almighty bless poor dear Stella, and send her a great many
+ birthdays, all happy, and healthy, and wealthy, and with me ever together,
+ and never asunder again, unless by chance. When I find you are happy or
+ merry there, it makes me so here, and I can hardly imagine you absent when
+ I am reading your letter, or writing to you. No, faith, you are just here
+ upon this little paper, and therefore I see and talk with you every
+ evening constantly, and sometimes in the morning, but not always in the
+ morning, because that is not so modest to young ladies.&mdash;What, you
+ would fain palm a letter on me more than you sent: and I, like a fool,
+ must look over all yours, to see whether this was really N.12, or more.
+ (Patrick has this moment brought me letters from the Bishop of Clogher and
+ Parvisol; my heart was at my mouth for fear of one from MD; what a
+ disgrace would it be to have two of yours to answer together! But, faith,
+ this shall go to-night, for fear; and then come when it will, I defy it.)
+ No, you are not naughty at all, write when you are disposed. And so the
+ Dean told you the story of Mr. Harley from the Archbishop; I warrant it
+ never spoiled your supper, or broke off your game. Nor yet, have not you
+ the box? I wish Mrs. Edgworth had the &mdash;&mdash;-. But you have it
+ now, I suppose; and is the chocolate good, or has the tobacco spoilt it?
+ Leigh stays till Sterne has done his business, no longer; and when that
+ will be, God knows: I befriend him as much as I can, but Harley's accident
+ stops that as well as all things else. You guess, Madam Dingley, that I
+ shall stay a round twelvemonth; as hope saved, I would come over, if I
+ could, this minute; but we will talk of that by and by. Your affair of
+ Vedeau I have told you of already; now to the next, turn over the leaf.
+ Mrs. Dobbins lies, I have no more provision here or in Ireland than I had.
+ I am pleased that Stella the conjurer approves what I did with Mr.
+ Harley;(23) but your generosity makes me mad; I know you repine inwardly
+ at Presto's absence; you think he has broken his word of coming in three
+ months, and that this is always his trick; and now Stella says she does
+ not see possibly how I can come away in haste, and that MD is satisfied,
+ etc. An't you a rogue to overpower me thus? I did not expect to find such
+ friends as I have done. They may indeed deceive me too. But there are
+ important reasons (Pox on this grease, this candle tallow!) why they
+ should not.(24) I have been used barbarously by the late Ministry; I am a
+ little piqued in honour to let people see I am not to be despised. The
+ assurances they give me, without any scruple or provocation, are such as
+ are usually believed in the world; they may come to nothing, but the first
+ opportunity that offers, and is neglected, I shall depend no more, but
+ come away. I could say a thousand things on this head, if I were with you.
+ I am thinking why Stella should not go to the Bath, if she be told it will
+ do her good. I will make Parvisol get up fifty pounds, and pay it you; and
+ you may be good housewives, and live cheap there some months, and return
+ in autumn, or visit London, as you please: pray think of it. I writ to
+ Bernage, directed to Curry's; I wish he had the letter. I will send the
+ bohea tea, if I can. The Bishop of Kilmore,(25) I don't keep such company;
+ an old dying fool whom I never was with in my life. So I am no
+ godfather;(26) all the better. Pray, Stella, explain those two words of
+ yours to me, what you mean by VILLIAN and DAINGER;(27) and you, Madam
+ Dingley, what is CHRISTIANING?&mdash;Lay your letter THIS WAY, THIS WAY,
+ and the devil a bit of difference between this way and the other way. No;
+ I will show you, lay them THIS WAY, THIS WAY, and not THAT WAY, THAT
+ WAY.(28)&mdash;You shall have your aprons; and I will put all your
+ commissions as they come, in a paper together, and do not think I will
+ forget MD's orders, because they are friends; I will be as careful as if
+ they were strangers. I knew not what to do about this Clements.(29) Walls
+ will not let me say anything as if Mr. Pratt was against him; and now the
+ Bishop of Clogher has written to me in his behalf. This thing does not
+ rightly fall in my way, and that people never consider: I always give my
+ good offices where they are proper, and that I am judge of; however, I
+ will do what I can. But, if he has the name of a Whig, it will be hard,
+ considering my Lord Anglesea and Hyde(30) are very much otherwise, and you
+ know they have the employment of Deputy Treasurer. If the frolic should
+ take you of going to the Bath, I here send you a note on Parvisol; if not,
+ you may tear it, and there's an end. Farewell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If you have an imagination that the Bath will do you good, I say again, I
+ would have you go; if not, or it be inconvenient, burn this note. Or, if
+ you would go, and not take so much money, take thirty pounds, and I will
+ return you twenty from hence. Do as you please, sirrahs. I suppose it will
+ not be too late for the first season; if it be, I would have you resolve
+ however to go the second season, if the doctors say it will do you good,
+ and you fancy so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0023" id="link2H_4_0023">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 20.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, April 5, 1711.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I put my nineteenth in the post-office just now myself, as I came out of
+ the City, where I dined. This rain ruins me in coach-hire; I walked away
+ sixpennyworth, and came within a shilling length, and then took a
+ coach,(1) and got a lift back for nothing; and am now busy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. Mr. Secretary desired I would see him this morning; said he had several
+ things to say to me, and said not one; and the Duke of Ormond sent to
+ desire I would meet him at Mr. Southwell's by ten this morning too, which
+ I did, thinking it was some particular matter. All the Irish in town were
+ there, to consult upon preventing a Bill for laying a duty on Irish yarn;
+ so we talked a while, and then all went to the lobby of the House of
+ Commons, to solicit our friends, and the Duke came among the rest; and
+ Lord Anglesea solicited admirably, and I did wonders. But, after all, the
+ matter was put off till Monday, and then we are to be at it again. I dined
+ with Lord Mountjoy, and looked over him at chess, which put me in mind of
+ Stella and Griffyth.(2) I came home, and that dog Patrick was not within;
+ so I fretted, and fretted, and what good did that do me?
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ And so get you gone to your deans,
+ You couple of queans.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I cannot find rhyme to Walls and Stoyte.&mdash;Yes, yes,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ You expect Mrs. Walls,
+ Be dressed when she calls,
+ To carry you to Stoyte,
+ Or else HONI SOIT.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Henley told me that the Tories were insup-port-able people, because they
+ are for bringing in French claret, and will not SUP-PORT. Mr. Harley will
+ hardly get abroad this week or ten days yet. I reckon, when I send away
+ this letter, he will be just got into the House of Commons. My last letter
+ went in twelve days, and so perhaps may this. No it won't, for those
+ letters that go under a fortnight are answers to one of yours, otherwise
+ you must take the days as they happen, some dry, some wet, some barren,
+ some fruitful, some merry, some insipid; some, etc.&mdash;I will write you
+ word exactly the first day I see young gooseberries, and pray observe how
+ much later you are. We have not had five fine days this five weeks, but
+ rain or wind. 'Tis a late spring they say here.&mdash;Go to bed, you two
+ dear saucy brats, and don't keep me up all night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. Ford has been at Epsom, to avoid Good Friday and Easter Sunday. He
+ forced me to-day to dine with him; and tells me there are letters from
+ Ireland, giving an account of a great indiscretion in the Archbishop of
+ Dublin, who applied a story out of Tacitus very reflectingly on Mr.
+ Harley, and that twenty people have written of it; I do not believe it
+ yet.(3) I called this evening to see Mr. Secretary, who has been very ill
+ with the gravel and pain in his back, by burgundy and champagne, added to
+ the sitting up all night at business; I found him drinking tea while the
+ rest were at champagne, and was very glad of it. I have chid him so
+ severely that I hardly knew whether he would take it well: then I went and
+ sat an hour with Mrs. St. John, who is growing a great favourite of mine;
+ she goes to the Bath on Wednesday, for she is much out of health, and has
+ begged me to take care of the Secretary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. I dined to-day with Mr. Secretary St. John; he gave me a letter to
+ read, which was from the publisher of the newspaper called the Postboy;(4)
+ in it there was a long copy of a letter from Dublin, giving an account of
+ what the Whigs said upon Mr. Harley's being stabbed, and how much they
+ abuse him and Mr. Secretary St. John; and at the end there were half a
+ dozen lines, telling the story of the Archbishop of Dublin, and abusing
+ him horribly; this was to be printed on Tuesday. I told the Secretary I
+ would not suffer that about the Archbishop to be printed, and so I crossed
+ it out; and afterwards, to prevent all danger, I made him give me the
+ letter, and, upon further thought, would let none of it be published: and
+ I sent for the printer, and told him so, and ordered him, in the
+ Secretary's name, to print nothing reflecting on anybody in Ireland till
+ he had showed it me. Thus I have prevented a terrible scandal to the
+ Archbishop, by a piece of perfect good fortune. I will let him know it by
+ next post; and pray, if you pick it out, let me know, and whether he is
+ thankful for it; but say nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. I was to-day at the House of Commons again about their yarn, at Lord
+ Anglesea's desire; but the business is again put off till Monday. I dined
+ with Sir John Stanley, by an assignation I had made with Mr. St. John, and
+ George Granville, the Secretary at War; but they let in other company,
+ some ladies, and so we were not so easy as I intended. My head is pretty
+ tolerable, but every day I feel some little disorders; I have left off
+ snuff since Sunday, finding myself much worse after taking a good deal at
+ the Secretary's. I would not let him drink one drop of champagne or
+ burgundy without water, and in compliment I did so myself. He is much
+ better; but when he is well, he is like Stella, and will not be governed.
+ So go to your Stoyte's, and I'll go sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. I have been visiting Lady Worsley and Mrs. Barton today, and dined
+ soberly with my friend Lewis. The Dauphin is dead of an apoplexy; I wish
+ he had lived till the finishing of this letter, that it might be news to
+ you. Duncombe,(5) the rich alderman, died to-day, and I hear has left the
+ Duke of Argyle, who married his niece, two hundred thousand pounds; I hope
+ it is true, for I love that Duke mightily. I writ this evening to the
+ Archbishop of Dublin, about what I told you; and then went to take leave
+ of poor Mrs. St. John, who gave me strict charge to take care of the
+ Secretary in her absence; said she had none to trust but me; and the poor
+ creature's tears came fresh in her eyes. Before we took leave, I was drawn
+ in by the other ladies and Sir John Stanley to raffle for a fan, with a
+ pox; it was four guineas, and we put in seven shillings apiece, several
+ raffling for absent people; but I lost, and so missed an opportunity of
+ showing my gallantry to Mrs. St. John, whom I designed to have presented
+ it to if I had won. Is Dilly(6) gone to the Bath? His face will whizz in
+ the water; I suppose he will write to us from thence, and will take London
+ in his way back.&mdash;The rabble will say, "There goes a drunken parson";
+ and, which is worse, they will say true. Oh, but you must know I carried
+ Ford to dine with Mr. St. John last Sunday, that he may brag, when he goes
+ back, of dining with a Secretary of State. The Secretary and I went away
+ early, and left him drinking with the rest, and he told me that two or
+ three of them were drunk. They talk of great promotions to be made; that
+ Mr. Harley is to be Lord Treasurer, and Lord Poulett(7) Master of the
+ Horse, etc., but they are only conjecture. The Speaker is to make Mr.
+ Harley a compliment the first time he comes into the House, which I hope
+ will be in a week. He has had an ill surgeon, by the caprice of that puppy
+ Dr. Radcliffe, which has kept him back so long; and yesterday he got a
+ cold, but is better to-day.&mdash;What! I think I am stark mad, to write
+ so much in one day to little saucy MD; here is a deal of stuff, indeed!
+ can't you bid those little dear rogues good-night, and let them go sleep,
+ Mr. Presto? When your tongue runs there's no ho with you, pray.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. Again at the lobby (like a lobcock)(8) of the House of Commons, about
+ your Irish yarn, and again put off till Friday; and I and Patrick went
+ into the City by water, where I dined, and then I went to the auction of
+ Charles Barnard's books; but the good ones were so monstrous dear, I could
+ not reach them, so I laid out one pound seven shillings but very
+ indifferently, and came away, and will go there no more. Henley would fain
+ engage me to go with Steele and Rowe, etc., to an invitation at Sir
+ William Read's.(9) Surely you have heard of him. He has been a mountebank,
+ and is the Queen's oculist; he makes admirable punch, and treats you in
+ gold vessels. But I am engaged, and will not go, neither indeed am I fond
+ of the jaunt. So good-night, and go sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. I went about noon to the Secretary, who is very ill with a cold, and
+ sometimes of the gravel, with his champagne, etc. I scolded him like a
+ dog, and he promises faithfully more care for the future. To-day my Lord
+ Anglesea, and Sir Thomas Hammer, and Prior, and I dined, by appointment,
+ with Lieutenant-General Webb.(10) My lord and I stayed till ten o'clock;
+ but we drank soberly, and I always with water. There was with us one Mr.
+ Campain,(11) one of the October Club, if you know what that is; a Club of
+ country members, who think the Ministers are too backward in punishing and
+ turning out the Whigs. I found my lord and the rest thought I had more
+ credit with the Ministry than I pretend to have, and would have engaged me
+ to put them upon something that would satisfy their desires, and indeed I
+ think they have some reason to complain; however, I will not burn my
+ fingers. I will remember Stella's chiding, "What had you to do with what
+ did not belong to you?" etc. However, you will give me leave to tell the
+ Ministry my thoughts when they ask them, and other people's thoughts
+ sometimes when they do not ask; so thinks Dingley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. I called this morning at Mrs. Vedeau's again, who has employed a
+ friend to get the money; it will be done in a fortnight, and then she will
+ deliver me up the parchment. I went then to see Mr. Harley, who I hope
+ will be out in a few days; he was in excellent good humour, only
+ complained to me of the neglect of Guiscard's cure, how glad he would have
+ been to have had him live. Mr. Secretary came in to us, and we were very
+ merry till Lord Chamberlain (Duke of Shrewsbury)(12) came up; then Colonel
+ Masham and I went off, after I had been presented to the Duke, and that we
+ made two or three silly compliments suitable to the occasion. Then I
+ attended at the House of Commons about your yarn, and it is again put off.
+ Then Ford drew me to dine at a tavern; it happened to be the day and the
+ house where the October Club dine. After we had dined, coming down we
+ called to inquire whether our yarn business had been over that day, and I
+ sent into the room for Sir George Beaumont.(13) But I had like to be drawn
+ into a difficulty; for in two minutes out comes Mr. Finch,(14) Lord
+ Guernsey's son, to let me know that my Lord Compton,(15) the steward of
+ this feast, desired, in the name of the Club, that I would do them the
+ honour to dine with them. I sent my excuses, adorned with about thirty
+ compliments, and got off as fast as I could. It would have been a most
+ improper thing for me to dine there, considering my friendship with the
+ Ministry. The Club is about a hundred and fifty, and near eighty of them
+ were then going to dinner at two long tables in a great ground-room. At
+ evening I went to the auction of Barnard's books, and laid out three
+ pounds three shillings, but I'll go there no more; and so I said once
+ before, but now I'll keep to it. I forgot to tell that when I dined at
+ Webb's with Lord Anglesea, I spoke to him of Clements, as one recommended
+ for a very honest gentleman and good officer, and hoped he would keep him.
+ He said he had not thought otherwise, and that he should certainly hold
+ his place while he continued to deserve it; and I could not find there had
+ been any intentions from his lordship against him. But I tell you, hunny,
+ the impropriety of this. A great man will do a favour for me, or for my
+ friend; but why should he do it for my friend's friend? Recommendations
+ should stop before they come to that. Let any friend of mine recommend one
+ of his to me for a thing in my power, I will do it for his sake; but to
+ speak to another for my friend's friend is against all reason; and I
+ desire you will understand this, and discourage any such troubles given
+ me.&mdash;I hope this may do some good to Clements, it can do him no hurt;
+ and I find by Mrs. Pratt,(16) that her husband is his friend; and the
+ Bishop of Clogher says Clements's danger is not from Pratt, but from some
+ other enemies, that think him a Whig.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. I was so busy this morning that I did not go out till late. I writ
+ to-day to the Duke of Argyle, but said nothing of Bernage, who, I believe,
+ will not see him till Spain is conquered, and that is, not at all. I was
+ to-day at Lord Shelburne's, and spoke to Mrs. Pratt again about Clements;
+ her husband himself wants some good offices, and I have done him very good
+ ones lately, and told Mrs. Pratt I expected her husband should stand by
+ Clements in return. Sir Andrew Fountaine and I dined with neighbour
+ Vanhomrigh; he is mighty ill of an asthma, and apprehends himself in much
+ danger; 'tis his own fault, that will rake and drink, when he is but just
+ crawled out of his grave. I will send this letter just now, because I
+ think my half-year is out for my lodging; and, if you please, I would be
+ glad it were paid off, and some deal boxes made for my books, and kept in
+ some safe place. I would give something for their keeping: but I doubt
+ that lodging will not serve me when I come back; I would have a larger
+ place for books, and a stable, if possible. So pray be so kind to pay the
+ lodging, and all accounts about it; and get Mrs. Brent to put up my
+ things. I would have no books put in that trunk where my papers are. If
+ you do not think of going to the Bath, I here send you a bill on Parvisol
+ for twenty pounds Irish, out of which you will pay for the lodging, and
+ score the rest to me. Do as you please, and love poor Presto, that loves
+ MD better than his life a thousand millions of times. Farewell, MD, etc.
+ etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0024" id="link2H_4_0024">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 21.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, April 14, 1711.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Remember, sirrahs, that there are but nine days between the dates of my
+ two former letters. I sent away my twentieth this moment, and now am
+ writing on like a fish, as if nothing was done. But there was a cause for
+ my hasting away the last, for fear it should not come time enough before a
+ new quarter began. I told you where I dined to-day; but forgot to tell you
+ what I believe, that Mr. Harley will be Lord Treasurer in a short time,
+ and other great removes and promotions made. This is my thought, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. I was this morning with Mr. Secretary, and he is grown pretty well. I
+ dined with him to-day, and drank some of that wine which the Duke of
+ Tuscany used to send to Sir William Temple:(1) he always sends some to the
+ chief Ministers. I liked it mightily, but he does not; and he ordered his
+ butler to send me a chest of it to-morrow. Would to God MD had it! The
+ Queen is well again, and was at chapel to-day, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. I went with Ford into the City to-day, and dined with Stratford, and
+ drank Tokay, and then we went to the auction; but I did not lay out above
+ twelve shillings. My head is a little out of order to-night, though no
+ formal fit. My Lord Keeper has sent to invite me to dinner to-morrow, and
+ you'll dine better with the Dean; and God bless you. I forgot to tell you
+ that yesterday was sent me a Narrative printed, with all the circumstances
+ of Mr. Harley's stabbing. I had not time to do it myself; so I sent my
+ hints to the author of the Atalantis,(2) and she has cooked it into a
+ sixpenny pamphlet, in her own style, only the first page is left as I was
+ beginning it. But I was afraid of disobliging Mr. Harley or Mr. St. John
+ in one critical point about it, and so would not do it myself. It is worth
+ your reading, for the circumstances are all true. My chest of Florence was
+ sent me this morning, and cost me seven and sixpence to two servants. I
+ would give two guineas you had it, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. I was so out of order with my head this morning, that I was going to
+ send my excuses to my Lord Keeper; but however I got up at eleven, and
+ walked there after two, and stayed till eight. There was Sir Thomas
+ Mansel, Prior, George Granville, and Mr. Caesar,(3) and we were very
+ merry. My head is still wrong, but I have had no formal fit, only I totter
+ a little. I have left off snuff altogether. I have a noble roll of tobacco
+ for grating, very good. Shall I send it to MD, if she likes that sort? My
+ Lord Keeper and our this day's company are to dine on Saturday with George
+ Granville, and to-morrow I dine with Lord Anglesea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. Did you ever see such a blundering goosecap as Presto? I saw the
+ number 21 at top, and so I went on as if it were the day of the month,
+ whereas this is but Wednesday the 18th. How shall I do to blot and alter
+ them? I have made a shift to do it behind, but it is a great botch. I
+ dined with Lord Anglesea to-day, but did not go to the House of Commons
+ about the yarn; my head was not well enough. I know not what is the
+ matter; it has never been thus before: two days together giddy from
+ morning till night, but not with any violence or pain; and I totter a
+ little, but can make shift to walk. I doubt I must fall to my pills again:
+ I think of going into the country a little way. I tell you what you must
+ do henceforward: you must enclose your letter in a fair half-sheet of
+ paper, and direct the outside "To Erasmus Lewis, Esquire, at my Lord
+ Dartmouth's office at Whitehall": for I never go to the Coffee-house, and
+ they will grudge to take in my letters. I forgot to tell you that your
+ mother was to see me this morning, and brought me a flask of sweet-water
+ for a present, admirable for my head; but I shall not smell to it. She is
+ going to Sheen, with Lady Giffard: she would fain send your papers over to
+ you, or give them to me. Say what you would have done, and it shall be
+ done; because I love Stella, and she is a good daughter, they say, and so
+ is Dingley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. This morning General Webb was to give me a visit: he goes with a
+ crutch and stick, yet was forced to come up two pair of stairs. I promised
+ to dine with him, but afterwards sent my excuses, and dined privately in
+ my friend Lewis's lodgings at Whitehall, with whom I had much business to
+ talk of, relating to the public and myself. Little Harrison the Tatler
+ goes to-morrow to the secretaryship I got him at the Hague, and Mr. St.
+ John has made him a present of fifty guineas to bear his charges. An't I a
+ good friend? Why are not you a young fellow, that I might prefer you? I
+ had a letter from Bernage from Kinsale: he tells me his commission for
+ captain-lieutenant was ready for him at his arrival: so there are two
+ jackanapeses I have done with. My head is something better this evening,
+ though not well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. I was this morning with Mr. Secretary, whose packets were just come
+ in, and among them a letter from Lord Peterborow to me: he writes so well,
+ I have no mind to answer him, and so kind, that I must answer him. The
+ Emperor's(4) death must, I think, cause great alterations in Europe, and,
+ I believe, will hasten a peace. We reckon our King Charles will be chosen
+ Emperor, and the Duke of Savoy set up for Spain; but I believe he will
+ make nothing of it. Dr. Freind and I dined in the City at a printer's, and
+ it has cost me two shillings in coach-hire, and a great deal more this
+ week and month, which has been almost all rain, with now and then
+ sunshine, and is the truest April that I have known these many years. The
+ lime-trees in the Park are all out in leaves, though not large leaves yet.
+ Wise people are going into the country; but many think the Parliament can
+ hardly be up these six weeks. Mr. Harley was with the Queen on Tuesday. I
+ believe certainly he will be Lord Treasurer: I have not seen him this
+ week.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21. Morning. Lord Keeper, and I, and Prior, and Sir Thomas Mansel, have
+ appointed to dine this day with George Granville. My head, I thank God, is
+ better; but to be giddyish three or four days together mortified me. I
+ take no snuff, and I will be very regular in eating little and the
+ gentlest meats. How does poor Stella just now, with her deans and her
+ Stoytes? Do they give you health for the money you lose at ombre, sirrah?
+ What say you to that? Poor Dingley frets to see Stella lose that four and
+ elevenpence, the other night. Let us rise. Morrow, sirrahs. I will rise,
+ spite of your little teeth; good-morrow.&mdash;At night. O, faith, you are
+ little dear saucyboxes. I was just going in the morning to tell you that I
+ began to want a letter from MD, and in four minutes after Mr. Ford sends
+ me one that he had picked up at St. James's Coffee-house; for I go to no
+ coffee-house at all. And, faith, I was glad at heart to see it, and to see
+ Stella so brisk. O Lord, what pretending? Well, but I will not answer it
+ yet; I'll keep it for t'other side. Well, we dined to-day according to
+ appointment: Lord Keeper went away at near eight, I at eight, and I
+ believe the rest will be fairly fuddled; for young Harcourt,(5) Lord
+ Keeper's son, began to prattle before I came away. It will not do with
+ Prior's lean carcass. I drink little, miss my glass often, put water in my
+ wine, and go away before the rest, which I take to be a good receipt for
+ sobriety. Let us put it into rhyme, and so make a proverb&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drink little at a time;
+ Put water with your wine;
+ Miss your glass when you can;
+ And go off the first man.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ God be thanked, I am much better than I was, though something of a
+ totterer. I ate but little to-day, and of the gentlest meat. I refused ham
+ and pigeons, pease-soup, stewed beef, cold salmon, because they were too
+ strong. I take no snuff at all, but some herb snuff prescribed by Dr.
+ Radcliffe.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Go to your deans,
+ You couple of queans.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I believe I said that already. What care I? what cares Presto?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22. Morning. I must rise and go to the Secretary's. Mr. Harley has been
+ out of town this week to refresh himself before he comes into Parliament.
+ Oh, but I must rise, so there is no more to be said; and so morrow,
+ sirrahs both.&mdash;Night. I dined to-day with the Secretary, who has
+ engaged me for every Sunday; and I was an hour with him this morning deep
+ in politics, where I told him the objections of the October Club, and he
+ answered all except one, that no inquiries are made into past
+ mismanagement. But indeed I believe they are not yet able to make any: the
+ late Ministry were too cunning in their rogueries, and fenced themselves
+ with an Act of general pardon. I believe Mr. Harley must be Lord
+ Treasurer; yet he makes one difficulty which is hard to answer: he must be
+ made a lord, and his estate is not large enough, and he is too generous to
+ make it larger; and if the Ministry should change soon by any accident, he
+ will be left in the suds. Another difficulty is, that if he be made a
+ peer, they will want him prodigiously in the House of Commons, of which he
+ is the great mover, and after him the Secretary, and hardly any else of
+ weight. Two shillings more to-day for coach and chair. I shall be ruined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23. So you expect an answer to your letter, do you so? Yes, yes, you shall
+ have an answer, you shall, young women. I made a good pun on Saturday to
+ my Lord Keeper. After dinner we had coarse Doiley napkins,(6) fringed at
+ each end, upon the table, to drink with: my Lord Keeper spread one of them
+ between him and Mr. Prior; I told him I was glad to see there was such a
+ fringeship (friendship) between Mr. Prior and his lordship. Prior swore it
+ was the worst he ever heard: I said I thought so too; but at the same time
+ I thought it was most like one of Stella's that ever I heard. I dined
+ to-day with Lord Mountjoy, and this evening saw the Venetian Ambassador(7)
+ coming from his first public audience. His coach was the most monstrous,
+ huge, fine, rich gilt thing that ever I saw. I loitered this evening, and
+ came home late.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24. I was this morning to visit the Duchess of Ormond,(8) who has long
+ desired it, or threatened she would not let me visit her daughters. I sat
+ an hour with her, and we were good company, when in came the Countess of
+ Bellamont,(9) with a pox. I went out, and we did not know one another; yet
+ hearing me named, she asked, "What, is that Dr. Swift?" said she and I
+ were very well acquainted, and fell a railing at me without mercy, as a
+ lady told me that was there; yet I never was but once in the company of
+ that drab of a Countess. Sir Andrew Fountaine and I dined with my
+ neighbour Van. I design in two days, if possible, to go lodge at Chelsea
+ for the air, and put myself under a necessity of walking to and from
+ London every day. I writ this post to the Bishop of Clogher a long politic
+ letter, to entertain him. I am to buy statues and harnese(10) for them,
+ with a vengeance. I have packed and sealed up MD's twelve letters against
+ I go to Chelsea. I have put the last commissions of MD in my account-book;
+ but if there be any former ones, I have forgot them. I have Dingley's
+ pocket-book down, and Stella's green silk apron, and the pound of tea;
+ pray send me word if you have any other, and down they shall go. I will
+ not answer your letter yet, saucy boxes. You are with the Dean just now,
+ Madam Stella, losing your money. Why do not you name what number you have
+ received? You say you have received my letters, but do not tell the
+ number.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25. I was this day dining in the City with very insignificant, low, and
+ scurvy company. I had a letter from the Archbishop of Dublin, with a long
+ denial of the report raised on him,(11) which yet has been since assured
+ to me from those who say they have it from the first hand; but I cannot
+ believe them. I will show it to the Secretary to-morrow. I will not answer
+ yours till I get to Chelsea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26. Chelsea. I have sent two boxes of lumber to my friend Darteneuf's
+ house, and my chest of Florence and other things to Mrs. Vanhomrigh, where
+ I dined to-day. I was this morning with the Secretary, and showed him the
+ Archbishop's letter, and convinced him of his Grace's innocence, and I
+ will do the same to Mr. Harley. I got here in the stage-coach with Patrick
+ and my portmanteau for sixpence, and pay six shillings a week for one
+ silly room with confounded coarse sheets.(12) We have had such a horrible
+ deal of rain, that there is no walking to London, and I must go as I came
+ until it mends; and besides the whelp has taken my lodging as far from
+ London as this town could afford, at least half a mile farther than he
+ need; but I must be content. The best is, I lodge just over against Dr.
+ Atterbury's house, and yet perhaps I shall not like the place the better
+ for that. Well, I will stay till to-morrow before I answer your letter;
+ and you must suppose me always writing at Chelsea from henceforward, till
+ I alter, and say London. This letter goes on Saturday, which will be just
+ a fortnight; so go and cheat Goody Stoyte, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27. Do you know that I fear my whole chest of Florence is turned sour, at
+ least the two first flasks were so, and hardly drinkable. How plaguy
+ unfortunate am I! and the Secretary's own is the best I ever tasted; and I
+ must not tell him, but be as thankful as if it were the best in
+ Christendom. I went to town in the sixpenny stage to-day; and hearing Mr.
+ Harley was not at home, I went to see him, because I knew by the message
+ of his lying porter that he was at home. He was very well, and just going
+ out, but made me promise to dine with him; and betwixt that and indeed
+ strolling about, I lost four pound seven shillings at play&mdash;with a&mdash;a&mdash;a&mdash;bookseller,
+ and got but about half a dozen books.(13) I will buy no more books now,
+ that's certain. Well, I dined at Mr. Harley's, came away at six, shifted
+ my gown, cassock, and periwig, and walked hither to Chelsea, as I always
+ design to do when it is fair. I am heartily sorry to find my friend the
+ Secretary stand a little ticklish with the rest of the Ministry; there
+ have been one or two disobliging things that have happened, too long to
+ tell: and t'other day in Parliament, upon a debate of about thirty-five
+ millions that have not been duly accounted for, Mr. Secretary, in his
+ warmth of speech, and zeal for his friend Mr. Brydges,(14) on whom part of
+ the blame was falling, said he did not know that either Mr. Brydges or the
+ late Ministry were at all to blame in this matter; which was very
+ desperately spoken, and giving up the whole cause: for the chief quarrel
+ against the late Ministry was the ill management of the treasure, and was
+ more than all the rest together. I had heard of this matter: but Mr.
+ Foley(15) beginning to discourse to-day at table, without naming Mr. St.
+ John, I turned to Mr. Harley, and said if the late Ministry were not to
+ blame in that article, he (Mr. Harley) ought to lose his head for putting
+ the Queen upon changing them. He made it a jest; but by some words
+ dropped, I easily saw that they take things ill of Mr. St. John; and by
+ some hints given me from another hand that I deal with, I am afraid the
+ Secretary will not stand long. This is the fate of Courts. I will, if I
+ meet Mr. St. John alone on Sunday, tell him my opinion, and beg him to set
+ himself right, else the consequences may be very bad; for I see not how
+ they can well want him neither, and he would make a troublesome enemy. But
+ enough of politics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28. Morning. I forgot to tell you that Mr. Harley asked me yesterday how
+ he came to disoblige the Archbishop of Dublin. Upon which (having not his
+ letter about me) I told him what the Bishop had written to me on that
+ subject,(16) and desired I might read him the letter some other time. But
+ after all, from what I have heard from other hands, I am afraid the
+ Archbishop is a little guilty. Here is one Brent Spencer, a brother of Mr.
+ Proby's,(17) who affirms it, and says he has leave to do so from Charles
+ Dering,(18) who heard the words; and that Ingoldsby,(19) abused the
+ Archbishop, etc. Well, but now for your saucy letter: I have no room to
+ answer it; O yes, enough on t'other side. Are you no sicker? Stella jeers
+ Presto for not coming over by Christmas; but indeed Stella does not jeer,
+ but reproach, poor poor Presto. And how can I come away and the
+ First-Fruits not finished? I am of opinion the Duke of Ormond will do
+ nothing in them before he goes, which will be in a fortnight, they say;
+ and then they must fall to me to be done in his absence. No, indeed, I
+ have nothing to print: you know they have printed the Miscellanies(20)
+ already. Are they on your side yet? If you have my snuff box, I will have
+ your strong box. Hi, does Stella take snuff again? or is it only because
+ it is a fine box? Not the Meddle, but the Medley,(21) you fool. Yes, yes,
+ a wretched thing, because it is against you Tories: now I think it very
+ fine, and the Examiner a wretched thing.&mdash;Twist your mouth, sirrah.
+ Guiscard, and what you will read in the Narrative,(22) I ordered to be
+ written, and nothing else. The Spectator is written by Steele, with
+ Addison's help: it is often very pretty. Yesterday it was made of a noble
+ hint I gave him long ago for his Tatlers, about an Indian supposed to
+ write his Travels into England.(23) I repent he ever had it. I intended to
+ have written a book on that subject. I believe he has spent it all in one
+ paper, and all the under-hints there are mine too; but I never see him or
+ Addison. The Queen is well, but I fear will be no long liver; for I am
+ told she has sometimes the gout in her bowels (I hate the word bowels). My
+ ears have been, these three months past, much better than any time these
+ two years; but now they begin to be a little out of order again. My head
+ is better, though not right; but I trust to air and walking. You have got
+ my letter, but what number? I suppose 18. Well, my shin has been well this
+ month. No, Mrs. Westley(24) came away without her husband's knowledge,
+ while she was in the country: she has written to me for some tea. They
+ lie; Mr. Harley's wound was very terrible: he had convulsions, and very
+ narrowly escaped. The bruise was nine times worse than the wound: he is
+ weak still. Well, Brooks married; I know all that. I am sorry for Mrs.
+ Walls's eye: I hope 'tis better. O yes, you are great walkers: but I have
+ heard them say, "Much talkers, little walkers": and I believe I may apply
+ the old proverb to you&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ If you talked no more than you walked,
+ Those that think you wits would be baulked.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Yes, Stella shall have a large printed Bible: I have put it down among my
+ commissions for MD. I am glad to hear you have taken the fancy of
+ intending to read the Bible. Pox take the box; is not it come yet? This is
+ trusting to your young fellows, young women; 'tis your fault: I thought
+ you had such power with Sterne that he would fly over Mount Atlas to serve
+ you. You say you are not splenetic; but if you be, faith, you will break
+ poor Presto's&mdash;I will not say the rest; but I vow to God, if I could
+ decently come over now, I would, and leave all schemes of politics and
+ ambition for ever. I have not the opportunities here of preserving my
+ health by riding, etc., that I have in Ireland; and the want of health is
+ a great cooler of making one's court. You guess right about my being bit
+ with a direction from Walls, and the letter from MD: I believe I described
+ it in one of my last. This goes to-night; and I must now rise and walk to
+ town, and walk back in the evening. God Almighty bless and preserve poor
+ MD. Farewell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ O, faith, don't think, saucy noses, that I'll fill this third side: I
+ can't stay a letter above a fortnight: it must go then; and you would
+ rather see a short one like this, than want it a week longer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My humble service to the Dean, and Mrs. Walls, and good, kind, hearty Mrs.
+ Stoyte, and honest Catherine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0025" id="link2H_4_0025">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 22.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ CHELSEA, April 28, 1711.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ At night. I say at night, because I finished my twenty-first this morning
+ here, and put it into the post-office my own self, like a good boy. I
+ think I am a little before you now, young women: I am writing my
+ twenty-second, and have received your thirteenth. I got to town between
+ twelve and one, and put on my new gown and periwig, and dined with Lord
+ Abercorn, where I had not been since the marriage of his son Lord
+ Peasley,(1) who has got ten thousand pounds with a wife. I am now a
+ country gentleman. I walked home as I went, and am a little weary, and am
+ got into bed: I hope in God the air and exercise will do me a little good.
+ I have been inquiring about statues for Mrs. Ashe: I made Lady Abercorn(2)
+ go with me; and will send them word next post to Clogher. I hate to buy
+ for her: I am sure she will maunder. I am going to study.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29. I had a charming walk to and from town to-day: I washed, shaved and
+ all, and changed gown and periwig, by half an hour after nine, and went to
+ the Secretary, who told me how he had differed with his friends in
+ Parliament: I apprehended this division, and told him a great deal of it.
+ I went to Court, and there several mentioned it to me as what they much
+ disliked. I dined with the Secretary; and we proposed doing some business
+ of importance in the afternoon, which he broke to me first, and said how
+ he and Mr. Harley were convinced of the necessity of it; yet he suffered
+ one of his under-secretaries to come upon us after dinner, who stayed till
+ six, and so nothing was done: and what care I? he shall send to me the
+ next time, and ask twice. To-morrow I go to the election at Westminster
+ School, where lads are chosen for the University: they say it is a sight,
+ and a great trial of wits. Our Expedition Fleet is but just sailed: I
+ believe it will come to nothing. Mr. Secretary frets at their tediousness,
+ but hopes great things from it, though he owns four or five princes are in
+ the secret; and, for that reason, I fear it is no secret to France. There
+ are eight regiments; and the Admiral(3) is your Walker's brother the
+ midwife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30. Morn. I am here in a pretty pickle: it rains hard; and the cunning
+ natives of Chelsea have outwitted me, and taken up all the three stage
+ coaches. What shall I do? I must go to town: this is your fault. I cannot
+ walk: I will borrow a coat. This is the blind side of my lodging out of
+ town; I must expect such inconveniences as these. Faith, I'll walk in the
+ rain. Morrow.&mdash;At night. I got a gentleman's chaise by chance, and so
+ went to town for a shilling, and lie this night in town. I was at the
+ election of lads at Westminster to-day, and a very silly thing it is; but
+ they say there will be fine doings to-morrow. I dined with Dr. Freind,(4)
+ the second master of the school, with a dozen parsons and others: Prior
+ would make me stay. Mr. Harley is to hear the election to-morrow; and we
+ are all to dine with tickets, and hear fine speeches. 'Tis terrible rainy
+ weather again: I lie at a friend's in the City.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ May 1. I wish you a merry May Day, and a thousand more. I was baulked at
+ Westminster; I came too late: I heard no speeches nor verses. They would
+ not let me in to their dining-place for want of a ticket; and I would not
+ send in for one, because Mr. Harley excused his coming, and Atterbury was
+ not there; and I cared not for the rest: and so my friend Lewis and I
+ dined with Kitt Musgrave,(5) if you know such a man: and, the weather
+ mending, I walked gravely home this evening; and so I design to walk and
+ walk till I am well: I fancy myself a little better already. How does poor
+ Stella? Dingley is well enough. Go, get you gone, naughty girl, you are
+ well enough. O dear MD, contrive to have some share of the country this
+ spring: go to Finglas, or Donnybrook, or Clogher, or Killala, or Lowth.
+ Have you got your box yet? Yes, yes. Do not write to me again till this
+ letter goes: I must make haste, that I may write two for one. Go to the
+ Bath: I hope you are now at the Bath, if you had a mind to go; or go to
+ Wexford: do something for your living. Have you given up my lodging,
+ according to order? I have had just now a compliment from Dean Atterbury's
+ lady,(6) to command the garden and library, and whatever the house
+ affords. I lodge just over against them; but the Dean is in town with his
+ Convocation: so I have my Dean and Prolocutor as well as you, young women,
+ though he has not so good wine, nor so much meat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. A fine day, but begins to grow a little warm; and that makes your
+ little fat Presto sweat in the forehead. Pray, are not the fine buns sold
+ here in our town; was it not Rrrrrrrrrare Chelsea buns?(7) I bought one
+ to-day in my walk; it cost me a penny; it was stale, and I did not like
+ it, as the man said, etc. Sir Andrew Fountaine and I dined at Mrs.
+ Vanhomrigh's, and had a flask of my Florence, which lies in their cellar;
+ and so I came home gravely, and saw nobody of consequence to-day. I am
+ very easy here, nobody plaguing me in a morning; and Patrick saves many a
+ score lies. I sent over to Mrs Atterbury to know whether I might wait on
+ her; but she is gone a visiting: we have exchanged some compliments, but I
+ have not seen her yet. We have no news in our town.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. I did not go to town to-day, it was so terrible rainy; nor have I
+ stirred out of my room till eight this evening, when I crossed the way to
+ see Mrs. Atterbury, and thank her for her civilities. She would needs send
+ me some veal, and small beer, and ale, to-day at dinner; and I have lived
+ a scurvy, dull, splenetic day, for want of MD: I often thought how happy I
+ could have been, had it rained eight thousand times more, if MD had been
+ with a body. My Lord Rochester(8) is dead this morning; they say at one
+ o'clock; and I hear he died suddenly. To-morrow I shall know more. He is a
+ great loss to us: I cannot think who will succeed him as Lord President. I
+ have been writing a long letter to Lord Peterborow, and am dull.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. I dined to-day at Lord Shelburne's, where Lady Kerry(9) made me a
+ present of four India handkerchiefs, which I have a mind to keep for
+ little MD, only that I had rather, etc. I have been a mighty
+ handkerchief-monger, and have bought abundance of snuff ones since I have
+ left off taking snuff. And I am resolved, when I come over, MD shall be
+ acquainted with Lady Kerry: we have struck up a mighty friendship; and she
+ has much better sense than any other lady of your country. We are almost
+ in love with one another: but she is most egregiously ugly; but perfectly
+ well-bred, and governable as I please. I am resolved, when I come, to keep
+ no company but MD: you know I kept my resolution last time; and, except
+ Mr. Addison, conversed with none but you and your club of deans and
+ Stoytes. 'Tis three weeks, young women, since I had a letter from you; and
+ yet, methinks, I would not have another for five pounds till this is gone;
+ and yet I send every day to the Coffee-house, and I would fain have a
+ letter, and not have a letter: and I do not know what, nor I do not know
+ how, and this goes on very slow; it is a week to-morrow since I began it.
+ I am a poor country gentleman, and do not know how the world passes. Do
+ you know that every syllable I write I hold my lips just for all the world
+ as if I were talking in our own little language to MD? Faith, I am very
+ silly; but I cannot help it for my life. I got home early to-night. My
+ solicitors, that used to ply me every morning, knew not where to find me;
+ and I am so happy not to hear "Patrick, Patrick," called a hundred times
+ every morning. But I looked backward, and find I have said this before.
+ What care I? Go to the Dean, and roast the oranges.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. I dined to-day with my friend Lewis, and we were deep in politics how
+ to save the present Ministry; for I am afraid of Mr. Secretary, as I
+ believe I told you. I went in the evening to see Mr. Harley; and, upon my
+ word, I was in perfect joy. Mr. Secretary was just going out of the door;
+ but I made him come back, and there was the old Saturday Club, Lord
+ Keeper, Lord Rivers, Mr. Secretary, Mr. Harley, and I; the first time
+ since his stabbing. Mr. Secretary went away; but I stayed till nine, and
+ made Mr. Harley show me his breast, and tell all the story; and I showed
+ him the Archbishop of Dublin's letter, and defended him effectually. We
+ were all in mighty good humour. Lord Keeper and I left them together, and
+ I walked here after nine two miles, and I found a parson drunk fighting
+ with a seaman, and Patrick and I were so wise to part them, but the seaman
+ followed him to Chelsea, cursing at him, and the parson slipped into a
+ house, and I know no more. It mortified me to see a man in my coat so
+ overtaken. A pretty scene for one that just came from sitting with the
+ Prime Ministers! I had no money in my pocket, and so could not be robbed.
+ However, nothing but Mr. Harley shall make me take such a journey again.
+ We don't yet know who will be President in Lord Rochester's room. I
+ measured, and found that the penknife would have killed Mr. Harley if it
+ had gone but half the breadth of my thumb-nail lower, so near was he to
+ death. I was so curious as to ask him what were his thoughts while they
+ were carrying him home in the chair. He said he concluded himself a dead
+ man. He will not allow that Guiscard gave him the second stab; though my
+ Lord Keeper, who is blind, and I that was not there, are positive in it.
+ He wears a plaster still as broad as half a crown. Smoke how wide the
+ lines are, but, faith, I don't do it on purpose: but I have changed my
+ side in this new Chelsea bed, and I do not know how, methinks, but it is
+ so unfit, and so awkward, never saw the like.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. You must remember to enclose your letters in a fair paper, and direct
+ the outside thus: "To Erasmus Lewis, Esq.; at my Lord Dartmouth's office
+ at Whitehall." I said so before, but it may miscarry, you know, yet I
+ think none of my letters did ever miscarry; faith, I think never one;
+ among all the privateers and the storms. O, faith, my letters are too good
+ to be lost. MD's letters may tarry, but never miscarry, as the old woman
+ used to say. And indeed, how should they miscarry, when they never come
+ before their time? It was a terrible rainy day; yet I made a shift to
+ steal fair weather overhead enough to go and come in. I was early with the
+ Secretary, and dined with him afterwards. In the morning I began to chide
+ him, and tell him my fears of his proceedings. But Arthur Moore(10) came
+ up and relieved him. But I forgot, for you never heard of Arthur Moore.
+ But when I get Mr. Harley alone, I will know the bottom. You will have Dr.
+ Raymond over before this letter, and what care you?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. I hope and believe my walks every day do me good. I was busy at home,
+ and set out late this morning, and dined with Mrs. Vanhomrigh, at whose
+ lodgings I always change my gown and periwig. I visited this afternoon,
+ and among others, poor Biddy Floyd,(11) who is very red, but I believe
+ won't be much marked. As I was coming home, I met Sir George Beaumont(12)
+ in the Pall Mall, who would needs walk with me as far as Buckingham House.
+ I was telling him of my head; he said he had been ill of the same
+ disorder, and by all means forbid me bohea tea, which, he said, always
+ gave it him; and that Dr. Radcliffe said it was very bad. Now I had
+ observed the same thing, and have left it off this month, having found
+ myself ill after it several times; and I mention it that Stella may
+ consider it for her own poor little head: a pound lies ready packed up and
+ directed for Mrs. Walls, to be sent by the first convenience. Mr.
+ Secretary told me yesterday that Mr. Harley would this week be Lord
+ Treasurer and a peer; so I expect it every day; yet perhaps it may not be
+ till Parliament is up, which will be in a fortnight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. I was to-day with the Duke of Ormond, and recommended to him the care
+ of poor Joe Beaumont, who promises me to do him all justice and favour,
+ and give him encouragement; and desired I would give a memorial to Ned
+ Southwell about it, which I will, and so tell Joe when you see him, though
+ he knows it already by a letter I writ to Mr. Warburton.(13) It was bloody
+ hot walking to-day. I dined in the City, and went and came by water; and
+ it rained so this evening again, that I thought I should hardly be able to
+ get a dry hour to walk home in. I will send to-morrow to the Coffee-house
+ for a letter from MD; but I would not have one methinks till this is gone,
+ as it shall on Saturday. I visited the Duchess of Ormond this morning; she
+ does not go over with the Duke. I spoke to her to get a lad touched for
+ the evil,(14) the son of a grocer in Capel Street, one Bell; the ladies
+ have bought sugar and plums of him. Mrs. Mary used to go there often. This
+ is Patrick's account; and the poor fellow has been here some months with
+ his boy. But the Queen has not been able to touch, and it now grows so
+ warm, I fear she will not at all. Go, go, go to the Dean's, and let him
+ carry you to Donnybrook, and cut asparagus. Has Parvisol sent you any this
+ year? I cannot sleep in the beginnings of the nights, the heat or
+ something hinders me, and I am drowsy in the mornings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. Dr. Freind came this morning to visit Atterbury's lady and children as
+ physician, and persuaded me to go with him to town in his chariot. He told
+ me he had been an hour before with Sir Cholmley Dering, Charles Dering's
+ nephew, and head of that family in Kent, for which he is Knight of the
+ shire. He said he left him dying of a pistol-shot quite through the body,
+ by one Mr. Thornhill.(15) They fought at sword and pistol this morning in
+ Tuttle Fields,(16) their pistols so near that the muzzles touched.
+ Thornhill discharged first; and Dering, having received the shot,
+ discharged his pistol as he was falling, so it went into the air. The
+ story of this quarrel is long. Thornhill had lost seven teeth by a kick in
+ the mouth from Dering, who had first knocked him down; this was above a
+ fortnight ago. Dering was next week to be married to a fine young lady.
+ This makes a noise here, but you will not value it. Well, Mr. Harley, Lord
+ Keeper, and one or two more, are to be made lords immediately; their
+ patents are now passing, and I read the preamble to Mr. Harley's, full of
+ his praises. Lewis and I dined with Ford: I found the wine; two flasks of
+ my Florence, and two bottles of six that Dr. Raymond sent me of French
+ wine; he sent it to me to drink with Sir Robert Raymond and Mr. Harley's
+ brother,(17) whom I had introduced him to; but they never could find time
+ to come; and now I have left the town, and it is too late. Raymond will
+ think it a cheat. What care I, sirrah?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. Pshaw, pshaw. Patrick brought me four letters to-day: from Dilly at
+ Bath; Joe; Parvisol; and what was the fourth, who can tell? Stand away,
+ who'll guess? Who can it be? You old man with a stick, can you tell who
+ the fourth is from? Iss, an please your honour, it is from one Madam MD,
+ Number Fourteen. Well; but I can't send this away now, because it was
+ here, and I was in town; but it shall go on Saturday, and this is Thursday
+ night, and it will be time enough for Wexford. Take my method: I write
+ here to Parvisol to lend Stella twenty pounds, and to take her note
+ promissory to pay it in half a year, etc. You shall see, and if you want
+ more, let me know afterwards; and be sure my money shall be always paid
+ constantly too. Have you been good or ill housewives, pray?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. Joe has written me to get him a collector's place, nothing less; he
+ says all the world knows of my great intimacy with Mr. Harley, and that
+ the smallest word to him will do. This is the constant cant of puppies who
+ are at a distance, and strangers to Courts and Ministers. My answer is
+ this, which pray send: that I am ready to serve Joe as far as I can; that
+ I have spoken to the Duke of Ormond about his money, as I writ to
+ Warburton; that for the particular he mentions, it is a work of time,
+ which I cannot think of at present; but, if accidents and opportunities
+ should happen hereafter, I would not be wanting; that I know best how far
+ my credit goes; that he is at a distance, and cannot judge; that I would
+ be glad to do him good, and if fortune throws an opportunity in my way I
+ shall not be wanting. This is my answer, which you may send or read to
+ him. Pray contrive that Parvisol may not run away with my two hundred
+ pounds; but get Burton's(18) note, and let the money be returned me by
+ bill. Don't laugh, for I will be suspicious. Teach Parvisol to enclose,
+ and direct the outside to Mr. Lewis. I will answer your letter in my next,
+ only what I take notice of here excepted. I forgot to tell you that at the
+ Court of Requests to-day I could not find a dinner I liked, and it grew
+ late, and I dined with Mrs. Vanhomrigh, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. Morning. I will finish this letter before I go to town, because I
+ shall be busy, and have neither time nor place there. Farewell, etc. etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0026" id="link2H_4_0026">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 23.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ CHELSEA, May 12, 1711.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I sent you my twenty-second this afternoon in town. I dined with Mr.
+ Harley and the old Club, Lord Rivers, Lord Keeper, and Mr. Secretary. They
+ rallied me last week, and said I must have Mr. St. John's leave; so I writ
+ to him yesterday, that foreseeing I should never dine again with Sir Simon
+ Harcourt, Knight, and Robert Harley, Esq., I was resolved to do it to-day.
+ The jest is, that before Saturday(1) next we expect they will be lords;
+ for Mr. Harley's patent is drawing, to be Earl of Oxford. Mr. Secretary
+ and I came away at seven, and he brought me to our town's end in his
+ coach; so I lost my walk. St. John read my letter to the company, which
+ was all raillery, and passed purely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. It rained all last night and this morning as heavy as lead; but I just
+ got fair weather to walk to town before church. The roads are all over in
+ deep puddle. The hay of our town is almost fit to be mowed. I went to
+ Court after church (as I always do on Sundays), and then dined with Mr.
+ Secretary, who has engaged me for every Sunday; and poor MD dined at home
+ upon a bit of veal and a pint of wine. Is it not plaguy insipid to tell
+ you every day where I dine? yet now I have got into the way of it, I
+ cannot forbear it neither. Indeed, Mr. Presto, you had better go answer
+ MD's letter, N.14. I will answer it when I please, Mr. Doctor. What is
+ that you say? The Court was very full this morning, expecting Mr. Harley
+ would be declared Earl of Oxford and have the Treasurer's staff. Mr.
+ Harley never comes to Court at all; somebody there asked me the reason.
+ "Why," said I, "the Lord of Oxford knows." He always goes to the Queen by
+ the back stairs. I was told for certain, you jackanapes, Lord Santry(2)
+ was dead, Captain Cammock(3) assured me so; and now he's alive again, they
+ say; but that shan't do: he shall be dead to me as long as he lives. Dick
+ Tighe(4) and I meet, and never stir our hats. I am resolved to mistake him
+ for Witherington, the little nasty lawyer that came up to me so sternly at
+ the Castle the day I left Ireland. I'll ask the gentleman I saw walking
+ with him how long Witherington has been in town.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. I went to town to-day by water. The hail quite discouraged me from
+ walking, and there is no shade in the greatest part of the way. I took the
+ first boat, and had a footman my companion; then I went again by water,
+ and dined in the City with a printer, to whom I carried a pamphlet in
+ manuscript, that Mr. Secretary gave me. The printer sent it to the
+ Secretary for his approbation, and he desired me to look it over, which I
+ did, and found it a very scurvy piece. The reason I tell you so, is
+ because it was done by your parson Slap, Scrap, Flap (what d'ye call him),
+ Trapp,(5) your Chancellor's chaplain. 'Tis called A Character of the
+ Present Set of Whigs, and is going to be printed, and no doubt the author
+ will take care to produce it in Ireland. Dr. Freind was with me, and
+ pulled out a twopenny pamphlet just published, called The State of Wit,(6)
+ giving a character of all the papers that have come out of late. The
+ author seems to be a Whig, yet he speaks very highly of a paper called the
+ Examiner, and says the supposed author of it is Dr. Swift. But above all
+ things he praises the Tatlers and Spectators; and I believe Steele and
+ Addison were privy to the printing of it. Thus is one treated by these
+ impudent dogs. And that villain Curll(7) has scraped up some trash, and
+ calls it Dr. Swift's Miscellanies, with the name at large: and I can get
+ no satisfaction of him. Nay, Mr. Harley told me he had read it, and only
+ laughed at me before Lord Keeper and the rest. Since I came home, I have
+ been sitting with the Prolocutor, Dean Atterbury, who is my neighbour over
+ the way, but generally keeps in town with his Convocation. 'Tis late, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. My walk to town to-day was after ten, and prodigiously hot. I dined
+ with Lord Shelburne, and have desired Mrs. Pratt, who lodges there, to
+ carry over Mrs. Walls's tea; I hope she will do it, and they talk of going
+ in a fortnight. My way is this: I leave my best gown and periwig at Mrs.
+ Vanhomrigh's, then walk up the Pall Mall, through the Park, out at
+ Buckingham House, and so to Chelsea a little beyond the church: I set out
+ about sunset, and get here in something less than an hour; it is two good
+ miles, and just five thousand seven hundred and forty-eight steps; so
+ there is four miles a day walking, without reckoning what I walk while I
+ stay in town. When I pass the Mall in the evening, it is prodigious to see
+ the number of ladies walking there; and I always cry shame at the ladies
+ of Ireland, who never walk at all, as if their legs were of no use, but to
+ be laid aside. I have been now almost three weeks here, and I thank God,
+ am much better in my head, if it does but continue. I tell you what, if I
+ was with you, when we went to Stoyte at Donnybrook, we would only take a
+ coach to the hither end of Stephen's Green, and from thence go every step
+ on foot, yes, faith, every step; it would do DD(8) good as well as
+ Presto.(9) Everybody tells me I look better already; for, faith, I looked
+ sadly, that is certain. My breakfast is milk porridge: I do not love it;
+ faith, I hate it, but it is cheap and wholesome; and I hate to be obliged
+ to either of those qualities for anything.(10)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. I wonder why Presto will be so tedious in answering MD's letters;
+ because he would keep the best to the last, I suppose. Well, Presto must
+ be humoured, it must be as he will have it, or there will be an old to
+ do.(11) Dead with heat; are not you very hot? My walks make my forehead
+ sweat rarely; sometimes my morning journey is by water, as it was to-day
+ with one Parson Richardson,(12) who came to see me, on his going to
+ Ireland; and with him I send Mrs. Walls's tea, and three books(13) I got
+ from the Lords of the Treasury for the College. I dined with Lord
+ Shelburne to-day; Lady Kerry and Mrs. Pratt are going likewise for
+ Ireland.&mdash;Lord! I forgot, I dined with Mr. Prior to-day, at his
+ house, with Dean Atterbury and others; and came home pretty late, and I
+ think I'm in a fuzz, and don't know what I say, never saw the like.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. Sterne came here by water to see me this morning, and I went back with
+ him to his boat. He tells me that Mrs. Edgworth(14) married a fellow in
+ her journey to Chester; so I believe she little thought of anybody's box
+ but her own. I desired Sterne to give me directions where to get the box
+ in Chester, which he says he will to-morrow; and I will write to
+ Richardson to get it up there as he goes by, and whip it over. It is
+ directed to Mrs. Curry: you must caution her of it, and desire her to send
+ it you when it comes. Sterne says Jemmy Leigh loves London mightily; that
+ makes him stay so long, I believe, and not Sterne's business, which Mr.
+ Harley's accident has put much backward. We expect now every day that he
+ will be Earl of Oxford and Lord Treasurer. His patent is passing; but,
+ they say, Lord Keeper's not yet; at least his son, young Harcourt, told me
+ so t'other day. I dined to-day privately with my friend Lewis at his
+ lodgings at Whitehall. T'other day at Whitehall I met a lady of my
+ acquaintance, whom I had not seen before since I came to England; we were
+ mighty glad to see each other, and she has engaged me to visit her, as I
+ design to do. It is one Mrs. Colledge: she has lodgings at Whitehall,
+ having been seamstress to King William, worth three hundred a year. Her
+ father was a fanatic joiner,(15) hanged for treason in Shaftesbury's plot.
+ This noble person and I were brought acquainted, some years ago, by Lady
+ Berkeley.(16) I love good creditable acquaintance: I love to be the worst
+ of the company: I am not of those that say, "For want of company, welcome
+ trumpery." I was this evening with Lady Kerry and Mrs. Pratt at Vauxhall,
+ to hear the nightingales; but they are almost past singing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. I was hunting the Secretary to-day in vain about some business, and
+ dined with Colonel Crowe, late Governor of Barbados,(17) and your friend
+ Sterne was the third: he is very kind to Sterne, and helps him in his
+ business, which lies asleep till Mr. Harley is Lord Treasurer, because
+ nothing of moment is now done in the Treasury, the change being expected
+ every day. I sat with Dean Atterbury till one o'clock after I came home;
+ so 'tis late, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. Do you know that about our town we are mowing already and making hay,
+ and it smells so sweet as we walk through the flowery meads; but the
+ hay-making nymphs are perfect drabs, nothing so clean and pretty as
+ farther in the country. There is a mighty increase of dirty wenches in
+ straw hats since I knew London. I stayed at home till five o'clock, and
+ dined with Dean Atterbury; then went by water to Mr. Harley's, where the
+ Saturday Club was met, with the addition of the Duke of Shrewsbury. I
+ whispered Lord Rivers that I did not like to see a stranger among us; and
+ the rogue told it aloud: but Mr. Secretary said the Duke writ to have
+ leave; so I appeared satisfied, and so we laughed. Mr. Secretary told me
+ the Duke of Buckingham(18) had been talking to him much about me, and
+ desired my acquaintance. I answered it could not be, for he had not made
+ sufficient advances. Then the Duke of Shrewsbury said he thought that Duke
+ was not used to make advances. I said I could not help that; for I always
+ expected advances in proportion to men's quality, and more from a duke
+ than any other man. The Duke replied that he did not mean anything of his
+ quality; which was handsomely said enough; for he meant his pride: and I
+ have invented a notion to believe that nobody is proud. At ten all the
+ company went away; and from ten to twelve Mr. Harley and I sat together,
+ where we talked through a great deal of matters I had a mind to settle
+ with him; and then walked in a fine moonshine night to Chelsea, where I
+ got by one. Lord Rivers conjured me not to walk so late; but I would,
+ because I had no other way; but I had no money to lose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. By what the Lord Keeper told me last night, I find he will not be made
+ a peer so soon; but Mr. Harley's patent for Earl of Oxford is now drawing,
+ and will be done in three days. We made him own it, which he did scurvily,
+ and then talked of it like the rest. Mr. Secretary had too much company
+ with him to-day; so I came away soon after dinner. I give no man liberty
+ to swear or talk b&mdash;-dy, and I found some of them were in constraint,
+ so I left them to themselves. I wish you a merry Whitsuntide, and pray
+ tell me how you pass away your time; but, faith, you are going to Wexford,
+ and I fear this letter is too late; it shall go on Thursday, and sooner it
+ cannot, I have so much business to hinder me answering yours. Where must I
+ direct in your absence? Do you quit your lodgings?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21. Going to town this morning, I met in the Pall Mall a clergyman of
+ Ireland, whom I love very well and was glad to see, and with him a little
+ jackanapes, of Ireland too, who married Nanny Swift, Uncle Adam's(19)
+ daughter, one Perry; perhaps you may have heard of him. His wife has sent
+ him here, to get a place from Lowndes;(20) because my uncle and Lowndes
+ married two sisters, and Lowndes is a great man here in the Treasury; but
+ by good luck I have no acquaintance with him: however, he expected I
+ should be his friend to Lowndes, and one word of mine, etc., the old cant.
+ But I will not go two yards to help him. I dined with Mrs. Vanhomrigh,
+ where I keep my best gown and periwig, to put on when I come to town and
+ be a spark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22. I dined to-day in the City, and coming home this evening, I met Sir
+ Thomas Mansel and Mr. Lewis in the Park. Lewis whispered me that Mr.
+ Harley's patent for the Earl of Oxford was passed in Mr. Secretary St.
+ John's office; so to-morrow or next day, I suppose, he will be declared
+ Earl of Oxford, and have the staff.(21) This man has grown by
+ persecutions, turnings out, and stabbing. What waiting, and crowding, and
+ bowing will be at his levee! yet, if human nature be capable of so much
+ constancy, I should believe he will be the same man still, bating the
+ necessary forms of grandeur he must keep up. 'Tis late, sirrahs, and I'll
+ go sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23. Morning. I sat up late last night, and waked late to-day; but will now
+ answer your letter in bed before I go to town, and I will send it
+ to-morrow; for perhaps you mayn't go so soon to Wexford.&mdash;No, you are
+ not out in your number; the last was Number 14, and so I told you twice or
+ thrice; will you never be satisfied? What shall we do for poor Stella? Go
+ to Wexford, for God's sake: I wish you were to walk there by three miles a
+ day, with a good lodging at every mile's end. Walking has done me so much
+ good, that I cannot but prescribe it often to poor Stella. Parvisol has
+ sent me a bill for fifty pounds, which I am sorry for, having not written
+ to him for it, only mentioned it two months ago; but I hope he will be
+ able to pay you what I have drawn upon him for: he never sent me any sum
+ before, but one bill of twenty pounds half a year ago. You are welcome as
+ my blood to every farthing I have in the world; and all that grieves me
+ is, I am not richer, for MD's sake, as hope saved.(22) I suppose you give
+ up your lodgings when you go to Wexford; yet that will be inconvenient
+ too: yet I wish again you were under a necessity of rambling the country
+ until Michaelmas, faith. No, let them keep the shelves, with a pox; yet
+ they are exacting people about those four weeks; or Mrs. Brent may have
+ the shelves, if she please. I am obliged to your Dean for his kind offer
+ of lending me money. Will that be enough to say? A hundred people would
+ lend me money, or to any man who has not the reputation of a squanderer.
+ O, faith, I should be glad to be in the same kingdom with MD, however,
+ although you are at Wexford. But I am kept here by a most capricious fate,
+ which I would break through, if I could do it with decency or honour.&mdash;To
+ return without some mark of distinction would look extremely little; and I
+ would likewise gladly be somewhat richer than I am. I will say no more,
+ but beg you to be easy till Fortune take her course, and to believe that
+ MD's felicity is the great end I aim at in all my pursuits. And so let us
+ talk no more on this subject, which makes me melancholy, and that I would
+ fain divert. Believe me, no man breathing at present has less share of
+ happiness in life than I: I do not say I am unhappy at all, but that
+ everything here is tasteless to me for want of being as I would be. And
+ so, a short sigh, and no more of this. Well, come and let's see what's
+ next, young women. Pox take Mrs. Edgworth and Sterne! I will take some
+ methods about that box. What orders would you have me give about the
+ picture? Can't you do with it as if it were your own? No, I hope Manley
+ will keep his place; for I hear nothing of Sir Thomas Frankland's losing
+ his. Send nothing under cover to Mr. Addison, but "To Erasmus Lewis, Esq.;
+ at my Lord Dartmouth's office at Whitehall." Direct your outside so.&mdash;Poor
+ dear Stella, don't write in the dark, nor in the light neither, but
+ dictate to Dingley; she is a naughty, healthy girl, and may drudge for
+ both. Are you good company together? and don't you quarrel too often? Pray
+ love one another, and kiss one another just now, as Dingley is reading
+ this; for you quarrelled this morning just after Mrs. Marget(23) had
+ poured water on Stella's head: I heard the little bird say so. Well, I
+ have answered everything in your letter that required it, and yet the
+ second side is not full. I'll come home at night, and say more; and
+ to-morrow this goes for certain. Go, get you gone to your own chambers,
+ and let Presto rise like a modest gentleman, and walk to town. I fancy I
+ begin to sweat less in the forehead by constant walking than I used to do;
+ but then I shall be so sunburnt, the ladies will not like me. Come, let me
+ rise, sirrahs. Morrow.&mdash;At night. I dined with Ford to-day at his
+ lodgings, and I found wine out of my own cellar, some of my own chest of
+ the great Duke's wine: it begins to turn. They say wine with you in
+ Ireland is half a crown a bottle. 'Tis as Stella says; nothing that once
+ grows dear in Ireland ever grows cheap again, except corn, with a pox, to
+ ruin the parson. I had a letter to-day from the Archbishop of Dublin,
+ giving me further thanks about vindicating him to Mr. Harley and Mr. St.
+ John, and telling me a long story about your Mayor's election,(24) wherein
+ I find he has had a finger, and given way to further talk about him; but
+ we know nothing of it here yet. This walking to and fro, and dressing
+ myself, takes up so much of my time that I cannot go among company so much
+ as formerly; yet what must a body do? I thank God I yet continue much
+ better since I left the town; I know not how long it may last. I am sure
+ it has done me some good for the present. I do not totter as I did, but
+ walk firm as a cock, only once or twice for a minute, I do not know how;
+ but it went off, and I never followed it. Does Dingley read my hand as
+ well as ever? do you, sirrah? Poor Stella must not read Presto's ugly
+ small hand.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Preserve your eyes,
+ If you be wise.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Your friend Walls's tea will go in a day or two towards Chester by one
+ Parson Richardson. My humble service to her, and to good Mrs. Stoyte, and
+ Catherine; and pray walk while you continue in Dublin. I expect your next
+ but one will be from Wexford. God bless dearest MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24. Morning. Mr. Secretary has sent his groom hither, to invite me to
+ dinner to-day, etc. God Almighty for ever bless and preserve you both, and
+ give you health, etc. Amen. Farewell, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Do not I often say the same thing two or three times in the same letter,
+ sirrah?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Great wits, they say, have but short memories; that's good vile
+ conversation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0027" id="link2H_4_0027">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 24.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ CHELSEA, May 24, 1711.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Morning. Once in my life the number of my letters and of the day of the
+ month is the same; that's lucky, boys; that's a sign that things will
+ meet, and that we shall make a figure together. What, will you still have
+ the impudence to say London, England, because I say Dublin, Ireland? Is
+ there no difference between London and Dublin, saucyboxes? I have sealed
+ up my letter, and am going to town. Morrow, sirrahs.&mdash;At night. I
+ dined with the Secretary to-day; we sat down between five and six. Mr.
+ Harley's patent passed this morning: he is now Earl of Oxford, Earl
+ Mortimer, and Lord Harley of Wigmore Castle. My letter was sealed, or I
+ would have told you this yesterday; but the public news may tell it you.
+ The Queen, for all her favour, has kept a rod(1) for him in her closet
+ this week; I suppose he will take it from her, though, in a day or two. At
+ eight o'clock this evening it rained prodigiously, as it did from five;
+ however, I set out, and in half-way the rain lessened, and I got home, but
+ tolerably wet; and this is the first wet walk I have had in a month's time
+ that I am here but, however, I got to bed, after a short visit to
+ Atterbury.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25. It rained this morning, and I went to town by water; and Ford and I
+ dined with Mr. Lewis by appointment. I ordered Patrick to bring my gown
+ and periwig to Mr. Lewis, because I designed to go to see Lord Oxford, and
+ so I told the dog; but he never came, though I stayed an hour longer than
+ I appointed; so I went in my old gown, and sat with him two hours, but
+ could not talk over some business I had with him; so he has desired me to
+ dine with him on Sunday, and I must disappoint the Secretary. My lord set
+ me down at a coffee-house, where I waited for the Dean of Carlisle's
+ chariot to bring me to Chelsea; for it has rained prodigiously all this
+ afternoon. The Dean did not come himself, but sent me his chariot, which
+ has cost me two shillings to the coachman; and so I am got home, and Lord
+ knows what is become of Patrick. I think I must send him over to you; for
+ he is an intolerable rascal. If I had come without a gown, he would have
+ served me so, though my life and preferment should have lain upon it: and
+ I am making a livery for him will cost me four pounds; but I will order
+ the tailor to-morrow to stop till further orders. My Lord Oxford can't yet
+ abide to be called "my lord"; and when I called him "my lord," he called
+ me "Dr. Thomas Swift,"(2) which he always does when he has a mind to tease
+ me. By a second hand, he proposed my being his chaplain, which I by a
+ second hand excused; but we had no talk of it to-day: but I will be no
+ man's chaplain alive. But I must go and be busy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26. I never saw Patrick till this morning, and that only once, for I
+ dressed myself without him; and when I went to town he was out of the way.
+ I immediately sent for the tailor, and ordered him to stop his hand in
+ Patrick's clothes till further orders. Oh, if it were in Ireland, I should
+ have turned him off ten times ago; and it is no regard to him, but myself,
+ that has made me keep him so long. Now I am afraid to give the rogue his
+ clothes. What shall I do? I wish MD were here to entreat for him, just
+ here at the bed's side. Lady Ashburnham(3) has been engaging me this long
+ time to dine with her, and I set to-day apart for it; and whatever was the
+ mistake, she sent me word she was at dinner and undressed, but would be
+ glad to see me in the afternoon: so I dined with Mrs. Vanhomrigh, and
+ would not go to see her at all, in a huff. My fine Florence is turning
+ sour with a vengeance, and I have not drunk half of it. As I was coming
+ home to-night, Sir Thomas Mansel and Tom Harley(4) met me in the Park, and
+ made me walk with them till nine, like unreasonable whelps; so I got not
+ here till ten: but it was a fine evening, and the foot-path clean enough
+ already after this hard rain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27. Going this morning to town, I saw two old lame fellows, walking to a
+ brandy-shop, and when they got to the door, stood a long time
+ complimenting who should go in first. Though this be no jest to tell, it
+ was an admirable one to see. I dined to-day with my Lord Oxford and the
+ ladies, the new Countess, and Lady Betty,(5) who has been these three days
+ a lady born. My lord left us at seven, and I had no time to speak to him
+ about some affairs; but he promises in a day or two we shall dine alone;
+ which is mighty likely, considering we expect every moment that the Queen
+ will give him the staff, and then he will be so crowded he will be good
+ for nothing: for aught I know he may have it to-night at Council.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28. I had a petition sent me t'other day from one Stephen Gernon, setting
+ forth that he formerly lived with Harry Tenison,(6) who gave him an
+ employment of gauger, and that he was turned out after Harry's death, and
+ came for England, and is now starving, or, as he expresses it, THAT THE
+ STAFF OF LIFE HAS BEEN OF LATE A STRANGER TO HIS APPETITE. Today the poor
+ fellow called, and I knew him very well, a young slender fellow with
+ freckles in his face: you must remember him; he waited at table as a
+ better sort of servant. I gave him a crown, and promised to do what I
+ could to help him to a service, which I did for Harry Tenison's memory. It
+ was bloody hot walking to-day, and I was so lazy I dined where my new gown
+ was, at Mrs. Vanhomrigh's, and came back like a fool, and the Dean of
+ Carlisle has sat with me till eleven. Lord Oxford has not the staff yet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29. I was this morning in town by ten, though it was shaving-day, and went
+ to the Secretary about some affairs, then visited the Duke and Duchess of
+ Ormond; but the latter was dressing to go out, and I could not see her. My
+ Lord Oxford had the staff given him this morning; so now I must call him
+ Lord Oxford no more, but Lord Treasurer: I hope he will stick there: this
+ is twice he has changed his name this week; and I heard to-day in the City
+ (where I dined) that he will very soon have the Garter.&mdash;Pr'ythee, do
+ not you observe how strangely I have changed my company and manner of
+ living? I never go to a coffee-house; you hear no more of Addison, Steele,
+ Henley, Lady Lucy, Mrs. Finch,(7) Lord Somers, Lord Halifax, etc. I think
+ I have altered for the better. Did I tell you the Archbishop of Dublin has
+ writ me a long letter of a squabble in your town about choosing a Mayor,
+ and that he apprehended some censure for the share he had in it?(8) I have
+ not heard anything of it here; but I shall not be always able to defend
+ him. We hear your Bishop Hickman is dead;(9) but nobody here will do
+ anything for me in Ireland; so they may die as fast or slow as they
+ please.&mdash;Well, you are constant to your deans, and your Stoyte, and
+ your Walls. Walls will have her tea soon; Parson Richardson is either
+ going or gone to Ireland, and has it with him. I hear Mr. Lewis has two
+ letters for me: I could not call for them to-day, but will to-morrow; and
+ perhaps one of them may be from our little MD, who knows, man? who can
+ tell? Many a more unlikely thing has happened.&mdash;Pshaw, I write so
+ plaguy little, I can hardly see it myself. WRITE BIGGER, SIRRAH(10)
+ Presto. No, but I won't. Oh, you are a saucy rogue, Mr. Presto, you are so
+ impudent. Come, dear rogues, let Presto go to sleep; I have been with the
+ Dean, and 'tis near twelve.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30. I am so hot and lazy after my morning's walk, that I loitered at Mrs.
+ Vanhomrigh's, where my best gown and periwig are, and out of mere
+ listlessness dine there very often; so I did to-day; but I got little MD's
+ letter, N.15 (you see, sirrahs, I remember to tell the number), from Mr.
+ Lewis, and I read it in a closet they lend me at Mrs. Van's; and I find
+ Stella is a saucy rogue and a great writer, and can write finely still
+ when her hand is in, and her pen good. When I came here to-night, I had a
+ mighty mind to go swim after I was cool, for my lodging is just by the
+ river; and I went down with only my nightgown and slippers on at eleven,
+ but came up again; however, one of these nights I will venture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 31. I was so hot this morning with my walk, that I resolve to do so no
+ more during this violent burning weather. It is comical that now we happen
+ to have such heat to ripen the fruit there has been the greatest blast
+ that was ever known, and almost all the fruit is despaired of. I dined
+ with Lord Shelburne: Lady Kerry and Mrs. Pratt are going to Ireland. I
+ went this evening to Lord Treasurer, and sat about two hours with him in
+ mixed company; he left us, and went to Court, and carried two staves with
+ him, so I suppose we shall have a new Lord Steward or Comptroller
+ to-morrow; I smoked that State secret out by that accident. I will not
+ answer your letter yet, sirrahs; no I won't, madam.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ June 1. I wish you a merry month of June. I dined again with the Vans and
+ Sir Andrew Fountaine. I always give them a flask of my Florence, which now
+ begins to spoil, but it is near an end. I went this afternoon to Mrs.
+ Vedeau's, and brought away Madam Dingley's parchment and letter of
+ attorney. Mrs. Vedeau tells me she has sent the bill a fortnight ago. I
+ will give the parchment to Ben Tooke, and you shall send him a letter of
+ attorney at your leisure, enclosed to Mr. Presto. Yes, I now think your
+ mackerel is full as good as ours, which I did not think formerly. I was
+ bit about two staves, for there is no new officer made to-day. This letter
+ will find you still in Dublin, I suppose, or at Donnybrook, or losing your
+ money at Walls' (how does she do?).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. I missed this day by a blunder and dining in the City.(11)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. No boats on Sunday, never: so I was forced to walk, and so hot by the
+ time I got to Ford's lodging that I was quite spent; I think the weather
+ is mad. I could not go to church. I dined with the Secretary as usual, and
+ old Colonel Graham(12) that lived at Bagshot Heath, and they said it was
+ Colonel Graham's house. Pshaw, I remember it very well, when I used to go
+ for a walk to London from Moor Park. What, I warrant you do not remember
+ the Golden Farmer(13) neither, figgarkick soley?(14)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. When must we answer this letter, this N.15 of our little MD? Heat and
+ laziness, and Sir Andrew Fountaine, made me dine to-day again at Mrs.
+ Van's; and, in short, this weather is unsupportable: how is it with you?
+ Lady Betty Butler and Lady Ashburnham sat with me two or three hours this
+ evening in my closet at Mrs. Van's. They are very good girls; and if Lady
+ Betty went to Ireland, you should let her be acquainted with you. How does
+ Dingley do this hot weather? Stella, I think, never complains of it; she
+ loves hot weather. There has not been a drop of rain since Friday
+ se'ennight. Yes, you do love hot weather, naughty Stella, you do so; and
+ Presto can't abide it. Be a good girl then, and I will love you; and love
+ one another, and don't be quarrelling girls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. I dined in the City to-day, and went from hence early to town, and
+ visited the Duke of Ormond and Mr. Secretary. They say my Lord Treasurer
+ has a dead warrant in his pocket; they mean a list of those who are to be
+ turned out of employment; and we every day now expect those changes. I
+ passed by the Treasury to-day, and saw vast crowds waiting to give Lord
+ Treasurer petitions as he passes by. He is now at the top of power and
+ favour: he keeps no levees yet. I am cruel thirsty this hot weather.&mdash;I
+ am just this minute going to swim. I take Patrick down with me, to hold my
+ nightgown, shirt, and slippers, and borrow a napkin of my landlady for a
+ cap. So farewell till I come up; but there is no danger, don't be
+ frighted.&mdash;I have been swimming this half-hour and more; and when I
+ was coming out I dived, to make my head and all through wet, like a cold
+ bath; but, as I dived, the napkin fell off and is lost, and I have that to
+ pay for. O, faith, the great stones were so sharp, I could hardly set my
+ feet on them as I came out. It was pure and warm. I got to bed, and will
+ now go sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. Morning. This letter shall go to-morrow; so I will answer yours when I
+ come home to-night. I feel no hurt from last night's swimming. I lie with
+ nothing but the sheet over me, and my feet quite bare. I must rise and go
+ to town before the tide is against me. Morrow, sirrahs; dear sirrahs,
+ morrow.&mdash;At night. I never felt so hot a day as this since I was
+ born. I dined with Lady Betty Germaine, and there was the young Earl of
+ Berkeley(15) and his fine lady. I never saw her before, nor think her near
+ so handsome as she passes for.&mdash;After dinner, Mr. Bertue(16) would
+ not let me put ice in my wine, but said my Lord Dorchester(17) got the
+ bloody flux with it, and that it was the worst thing in the world. Thus
+ are we plagued, thus are we plagued; yet I have done it five or six times
+ this summer, and was but the drier and the hotter for it. Nothing makes me
+ so excessively peevish as hot weather. Lady Berkeley after dinner clapped
+ my hat on another lady's head, and she in roguery put it upon the rails. I
+ minded them not; but in two minutes they called me to the window, and Lady
+ Carteret(18) showed me my hat out of her window five doors off, where I
+ was forced to walk to it, and pay her and old Lady Weymouth(19) a visit,
+ with some more beldames. Then I went and drank coffee, and made one or two
+ puns, with Lord Pembroke,(20) and designed to go to Lord Treasurer; but it
+ was too late, and beside I was half broiled, and broiled without butter;
+ for I never sweat after dinner, if I drink any wine. Then I sat an hour
+ with Lady Betty Butler at tea, and everything made me hotter and drier.
+ Then I walked home, and was here by ten, so miserably hot, that I was in
+ as perfect a passion as ever I was in my life at the greatest affront or
+ provocation. Then I sat an hour, till I was quite dry and cool enough to
+ go swim; which I did, but with so much vexation that I think I have given
+ it over: for I was every moment disturbed by boats, rot them; and that
+ puppy Patrick, standing ashore, would let them come within a yard or two,
+ and then call sneakingly to them. The only comfort I proposed here in hot
+ weather is gone; for there is no jesting with those boats after it is
+ dark: I had none last night. I dived to dip my head, and held my cap on
+ with both my hands, for fear of losing it. Pox take the boats! Amen. 'Tis
+ near twelve, and so I'll answer your letter (it strikes twelve now)
+ to-morrow morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. Morning. Well, now let us answer MD's letter, N.15, 15, 15, 15. Now
+ have I told you the number? 15, 15; there, impudence, to call names in the
+ beginning of your letter, before you say, How do you do, Mr. Presto? There
+ is your breeding! Where is your manners, sirrah, to a gentleman? Get you
+ gone, you couple of jades.&mdash;No, I never sit up late now; but this
+ abominable hot weather will force me to eat or drink something that will
+ do me hurt. I do venture to eat a few strawberries.&mdash;Why then, do you
+ know in Ireland that Mr. St. John talked so in Parliament?(21) Your Whigs
+ are plaguily bit; for he is entirely for their being all out.&mdash;And
+ are you as vicious in snuff as ever? I believe, as you say, it does
+ neither hurt nor good; but I have left it off, and when anybody offers me
+ their box, I take about a tenth part of what I used to do, and then just
+ smell to it, and privately fling the rest away. I keep to my tobacco
+ still,(22) as you say; but even much less of that than formerly, only
+ mornings and evenings, and very seldom in the day.&mdash;As for Joe,(23) I
+ have recommended his case heartily to my Lord Lieutenant; and, by his
+ direction, given a memorial of it to Mr. Southwell, to whom I have
+ recommended it likewise. I can do no more, if he were my brother. His
+ business will be to apply himself to Southwell. And you must desire
+ Raymond, if Price of Galway comes to town, to desire him to wait on Mr.
+ Southwell, as recommended by me for one of the Duke's chaplains, which was
+ all I could do for him; and he must be presented to the Duke, and make his
+ court, and ply about, and find out some vacancy, and solicit early for it.
+ The bustle about your Mayor I had before, as I told you, from the
+ Archbishop of Dublin. Was Raymond not come till May 18? So he says fine
+ things of me? Certainly he lies. I am sure I used him indifferently
+ enough; and we never once dined together, or walked, or were in any third
+ place; only he came sometimes to my lodgings, and even there was oftener
+ denied than admitted.&mdash;What an odd bill is that you sent of
+ Raymond's! A bill upon one Murry in Chester, which depends entirely not
+ only upon Raymond's honesty, but his discretion; and in money matters he
+ is the last man I would depend on. Why should Sir Alexander Cairnes(24) in
+ London pay me a bill, drawn by God knows who, upon Murry in Chester? I was
+ at Cairnes's, and they can do no such thing. I went among some friends,
+ who are merchants, and I find the bill must be sent to Murry, accepted by
+ him, and then returned back, and then Cairnes may accept or refuse it as
+ he pleases. Accordingly I gave Sir Thomas Frankland the bill, who has sent
+ it to Chester, and ordered the postmaster there to get it accepted, and
+ then send it back, and in a day or two I shall have an answer; and
+ therefore this letter must stay a day or two longer than I intended, and
+ see what answer I get. Raymond should have written to Murry at the same
+ time, to desire Sir Alexander Cairnes to have answered such a bill, if it
+ come. But Cairnes's clerks (himself was not at home) said they had
+ received no notice of it, and could do nothing; and advised me to send to
+ Murry.&mdash;I have been six weeks to-day at Chelsea, and you know it but
+ just now. And so Dean &mdash;&mdash;&mdash; thinks I write the Medley. Pox
+ of his judgment! It is equal to his honesty. Then you han't seen the
+ Miscellany yet?(25) Why, 'tis a four-shilling book: has nobody carried it
+ over?&mdash;No, I believe Manley(26) will not lose his place; for his
+ friend(27) in England is so far from being out that he has taken a new
+ patent since the Post Office Act; and his brother Jack Manley(28) here
+ takes his part firmly; and I have often spoken to Southwell in his behalf,
+ and he seems very well inclined to him. But the Irish folks here in
+ general are horribly violent against him. Besides, he must consider he
+ could not send Stella wine if he were put out. And so he is very kind, and
+ sends you a dozen bottles of wine AT A TIME, and you win eight shillings
+ AT A TIME; and how much do you lose? No, no, never one syllable about
+ that, I warrant you.&mdash;Why, this same Stella is so unmerciful a
+ writer, she has hardly left any room for Dingley. If you have such summer
+ there as here, sure the Wexford waters are good by this time. I forgot
+ what weather we had May 6th; go look in my journal. We had terrible rain
+ the 24th and 25th, and never a drop since. Yes, yes, I remember Berested's
+ bridge; the coach sosses up and down as one goes that way, just as at
+ Hockley-in-the-Hole.(29) I never impute any illness or health I have to
+ good or ill weather, but to want of exercise, or ill air, or something I
+ have eaten, or hard study, or sitting up; and so I fence against those as
+ well as I can: but who a deuce can help the weather? Will Seymour,(30) the
+ General, was excessively hot with the sun shining full upon him; so he
+ turns to the sun, and says, "Harkee, friend, you had better go and ripen
+ cucumbers than plague me at this rate," etc. Another time, fretting at the
+ heat, a gentleman by said it was such weather as pleased God: Seymour
+ said, "Perhaps it may; but I am sure it pleases nobody else." Why, Madam
+ Dingley, the First-Fruits are done. Southwell told me they went to inquire
+ about them, and Lord Treasurer said they were done, and had been done long
+ ago. And I'll tell you a secret you must not mention, that the Duke of
+ Ormond is ordered to take notice of them in his speech in your Parliament:
+ and I desire you will take care to say on occasion that my Lord Treasurer
+ Harley did it many months ago, before the Duke was Lord Lieutenant. And
+ yet I cannot possibly come over yet: so get you gone to Wexford, and make
+ Stella well. Yes, yes, I take care not to walk late; I never did but once,
+ and there are five hundred people on the way as I walk. Tisdall is a
+ puppy, and I will excuse him the half-hour he would talk with me. As for
+ the Examiner, I have heard a whisper that after that of this day,(31)
+ which tells us what this Parliament has done, you will hardly find them so
+ good. I prophesy they will be trash for the future; and methinks in this
+ day's Examiner the author talks doubtfully, as if he would write no
+ more.(32) Observe whether the change be discovered in Dublin, only for
+ your own curiosity, that's all. Make a mouth there. Mrs. Vedeau's business
+ I have answered, and I hope the bill is not lost. Morrow. 'Tis stewing
+ hot, but I must rise and go to town between fire and water. Morrow,
+ sirrahs both, morrow.&mdash;At night. I dined to-day with Colonel Crowe,
+ Governor of Jamaica, and your friend Sterne. I presented Sterne to my Lord
+ Treasurer's brother,(33) and gave him his case, and engaged him in his
+ favour. At dinner there fell the swingingest long shower, and the most
+ grateful to me, that ever I saw: it thundered fifty times at least, and
+ the air is so cool that a body is able to live; and I walked home to-night
+ with comfort, and without dirt. I went this evening to Lord Treasurer, and
+ sat with him two hours, and we were in very good humour, and he abused me,
+ and called me Dr. Thomas Swift fifty times: I have told you he does that
+ when he has mind to make me mad.(34) Sir Thomas Frankland gave me to-day a
+ letter from Murry, accepting my bill; so all is well: only, by a letter
+ from Parvisol, I find there are some perplexities.&mdash;Joe has likewise
+ written to me, to thank me for what I have done for him; and desires I
+ would write to the Bishop of Clogher, that Tom Ashe(35) may not hinder his
+ father(36) from being portreve. I have written and sent to Joe several
+ times, that I will not trouble myself at all about Trim. I wish them their
+ liberty, but they do not deserve it: so tell Joe, and send to him. I am
+ mighty happy with this rain: I was at the end of my patience, but now I
+ live again. This cannot go till Saturday; and perhaps I may go out of town
+ with Lord Shelburne and Lady Kerry to-morrow for two or three days. Lady
+ Kerry has written to desire it; but tomorrow I shall know farther.&mdash;O
+ this dear rain, I cannot forbear praising it: I never felt myself to be
+ revived so in my life. It lasted from three till five, hard as a horn, and
+ mixed with hail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. Morning. I am going to town, and will just finish this there, if I go
+ into the country with Lady Kerry and Lord Shelburne: so morrow, till an
+ hour or two hence.&mdash;In town. I met Cairnes, who, I suppose, will pay
+ me the money; though he says I must send him the bill first, and I will
+ get it done in absence. Farewell, etc. etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0028" id="link2H_4_0028">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 25.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ CHELSEA, June 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I have been all this time at Wycombe, between Oxford and London, with Lord
+ Shelburne, who has the squire's house at the town's end, and an estate
+ there in a delicious country. Lady Kerry and Mrs. Pratt were with us, and
+ we passed our time well enough; and there I wholly disengaged myself from
+ all public thoughts, and everything but MD, who had the impudence to send
+ me a letter there; but I'll be revenged: I will answer it. This day, the
+ 20th, I came from Wycombe with Lady Kerry after dinner, lighted at Hyde
+ Park Corner, and walked: it was twenty-seven miles, and we came it in
+ about five hours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21. I went at noon to see Mr. Secretary at his office, and there was Lord
+ Treasurer: so I killed two birds, etc., and we were glad to see one
+ another, and so forth. And the Secretary and I dined at Sir William
+ Wyndham's,(1) who married Lady Catharine Seymour, your acquaintance, I
+ suppose. There were ten of us at dinner. It seems, in my absence, they had
+ erected a Club,(2) and made me one; and we made some laws to-day, which I
+ am to digest and add to, against next meeting. Our meetings are to be
+ every Thursday. We are yet but twelve: Lord Keeper and Lord Treasurer were
+ proposed; but I was against them, and so was Mr. Secretary, though their
+ sons are of it, and so they are excluded; but we design to admit the Duke
+ of Shrewsbury. The end of our Club is, to advance conversation and
+ friendship, and to reward deserving persons with our interest and
+ recommendation. We take in none but men of wit or men of interest; and if
+ we go on as we begin, no other Club in this town will be worth talking of.
+ The Solicitor-General, Sir Robert Raymond, is one of our Club; and I
+ ordered him immediately to write to your Lord Chancellor in favour of Dr.
+ Raymond: so tell Raymond, if you see him; but I believe this will find you
+ at Wexford. This letter will come three weeks after the last, so there is
+ a week lost; but that is owing to my being out of town; yet I think it is
+ right, because it goes enclosed to Mr. Reading:(3) and why should he know
+ how often Presto writes to MD, pray?&mdash;I sat this evening with Lady
+ Betty Butler and Lady Ashburnham, and then came home by eleven, and had a
+ good cool walk; for we have had no extreme hot weather this fortnight, but
+ a great deal of rain at times, and a body can live and breathe. I hope it
+ will hold so. We had peaches to-day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22. I went late to-day to town, and dined with my friend Lewis. I saw Will
+ Congreve attending at the Treasury, by order, with his brethren, the
+ Commissioners of the Wine Licences. I had often mentioned him with
+ kindness to Lord Treasurer; and Congreve told me that, after they had
+ answered to what they were sent for, my lord called him privately, and
+ spoke to him with great kindness, promising his protection, etc. The poor
+ man said he had been used so ill of late years that he was quite
+ astonished at my lord's goodness, etc., and desired me to tell my lord so;
+ which I did this evening, and recommended him heartily. My lord assured me
+ he esteemed him very much, and would be always kind to him; that what he
+ said was to make Congreve easy, because he knew people talked as if his
+ lordship designed to turn everybody out, and particularly Congreve: which
+ indeed was true, for the poor man told me he apprehended it. As I left my
+ Lord Treasurer, I called on Congreve (knowing where he dined), and told
+ him what had passed between my lord and me; so I have made a worthy man
+ easy, and that is a good day's work.(4) I am proposing to my lord to erect
+ a society or academy for correcting and settling our language, that we may
+ not perpetually be changing as we do. He enters mightily into it, so does
+ the Dean of Carlisle;(5) and I design to write a letter to Lord Treasurer
+ with the proposals of it, and publish it;(6) and so I told my lord, and he
+ approves it. Yesterday's(7) was a sad Examiner, and last week was very
+ indifferent, though some little scraps of the old spirit, as if he had
+ given some hints; but yesterday's is all trash. It is plain the hand is
+ changed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23. I have not been in London to-day: for Dr. Gastrell(8) and I dined, by
+ invitation, with the Dean of Carlisle, my neighbour; so I know not what
+ they are doing in the world, a mere country gentleman. And are not you
+ ashamed both to go into the country just when I did, and stay ten days,
+ just as I did, saucy monkeys? But I never rode; I had no horses, and our
+ coach was out of order, and we went and came in a hired one. Do you keep
+ your lodgings when you go to Wexford? I suppose you do; for you will
+ hardly stay above two months. I have been walking about our town to-night,
+ and it is a very scurvy place for walking. I am thinking to leave it, and
+ return to town, now the Irish folks are gone. Ford goes in three days. How
+ does Dingley divert herself while Stella is riding? work, or read, or
+ walk? Does Dingley ever read to you? Had you ever a book with you in the
+ country? Is all that left off? Confess. Well, I'll go sleep; 'tis past
+ eleven, and I go early to sleep: I write nothing at night but to MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24. Stratford and I, and Pastoral Philips (just come from Denmark) dined
+ at Ford's to-day, who paid his way, and goes for Ireland on Tuesday. The
+ Earl of Peterborow is returned from Vienna without one servant: he left
+ them scattered in several towns of Germany. I had a letter from him, four
+ days ago, from Hanover, where he desires I would immediately send him an
+ answer to his house at Parson's Green,(9) about five miles off. I wondered
+ what he meant, till I heard he was come. He sent expresses, and got here
+ before them. He is above fifty, and as active as one of five-and-twenty. I
+ have not seen him yet, nor know when I shall, or where to find him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25. Poor Duke of Shrewsbury has been very ill of a fever: we were all in a
+ fright about him: I thank God, he is better. I dined to-day at Lord
+ Ashburnham's, with his lady, for he was not at home: she is a very good
+ girl, and always a great favourite of mine. Sterne tells me he has desired
+ a friend to receive your box in Chester, and carry it over. I fear he will
+ miscarry in his business, which was sent to the Treasury before he was
+ recommended; for I was positive only to second his recommendations, and
+ all his other friends failed him. However, on your account I will do what
+ I can for him to-morrow with the secretary of the Treasury.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26. We had much company to-day at dinner at Lord Treasurer's. Prior never
+ fails: he is a much better courtier than I; and we expect every day that
+ he will be a Commissioner of the Customs, and that in a short time a great
+ many more will be turned out. They blame Lord Treasurer for his slowness
+ in turning people out; but I suppose he has his reasons. They still keep
+ my neighbour Atterbury in suspense about the deanery of Christ Church,(10)
+ which has been above six months vacant, and he is heartily angry. I reckon
+ you are now preparing for your Wexford expedition; and poor Dingley is
+ full of carking and caring, scolding. How long will you stay? Shall I be
+ in Dublin before you return? Don't fall and hurt yourselves, nor overturn
+ the coach. Love one another, and be good girls; and drink Presto's health
+ in water, Madam Stella; and in good ale, Madam Dingley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27. The Secretary appointed me to dine with him to-day, and we were to do
+ a world of business: he came at four, and brought Prior with him, and had
+ forgot the appointment, and no business was done. I left him at eight, and
+ went to change my gown at Mrs. Vanhomrigh's; and there was Sir Andrew
+ Fountaine at ombre with Lady Ashburnham and Lady Frederic Schomberg, and
+ Lady Mary Schomberg,(11) and Lady Betty Butler, and others, talking; and
+ it put me in mind of the Dean and Stoyte, and Walls, and Stella at play,
+ and Dingley and I looking on. I stayed with them till ten, like a fool.
+ Lady Ashburnham is something like Stella; so I helped her, and wished her
+ good cards. It is late, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28. Well, but I must answer this letter of our MD's. Saturday approaches,
+ and I han't written down this side. O, faith, Presto has been a sort of a
+ lazy fellow: but Presto will remove to town this day se'ennight; the
+ Secretary has commanded me to do so; and I believe he and I shall go for
+ some days to Windsor, where he will have leisure to mind some business we
+ have together. To-day, our Society (it must not be called a Club) dined at
+ Mr. Secretary's: we were but eight; the rest sent excuses, or were out of
+ town. We sat till eight, and made some laws and settlements; and then I
+ went to take leave of Lady Ashburnham, who goes out of town to-morrow, as
+ a great many of my acquaintance are already, and left the town very thin.
+ I shall make but short journeys this summer, and not be long out of
+ London. The days are grown sensibly short already, all our fruit blasted.
+ Your Duke of Ormond is still at Chester; and perhaps this letter will be
+ with you as soon as he. Sterne's business is quite blown up: they stand to
+ it to send him back to the Commissioners of the Revenue in Ireland for a
+ reference, and all my credit could not alter it, though I almost fell out
+ with the secretary of the Treasury,(12) who is my Lord Treasurer's
+ cousin-germain, and my very good friend. It seems every step he has
+ hitherto taken hath been wrong; at least they say so, and that is the same
+ thing. I am heartily sorry for it; and I really think they are in the
+ wrong, and use him hardly; but I can do no more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29. Steele has had the assurance to write to me that I would engage my
+ Lord Treasurer to keep a friend of his in an employment: I believe I told
+ you how he and Addison served me for my good offices in Steele's behalf;
+ and I promised Lord Treasurer never to speak for either of them again. Sir
+ Andrew Fountaine and I dined to-day at Mrs. Vanhomrigh's. Dilly Ashe has
+ been in town this fortnight: I saw him twice; he was four days at Lord
+ Pembroke's in the country, punning with him; his face is very well. I was
+ this evening two or three hours at Lord Treasurer's, who called me Dr.
+ Thomas Swift twenty times; that's his way of teasing. I left him at nine,
+ and got home here by ten, like a gentleman; and to-morrow morning I'll
+ answer your little letter, sirrahs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30. Morning. I am terribly sleepy always in a morning; I believe it is my
+ walk over-night that disposes me to sleep: faith, 'tis now striking eight,
+ and I am but just awake. Patrick comes early, and wakes me five or six
+ times; but I have excuses, though I am three parts asleep. I tell him I
+ sat up late, or slept ill in the night, and often it is a lie. I have now
+ got little MD's letter before me, N.16, no more, nor no less, no mistake.
+ Dingley says, "This letter won't be above six lines"; and I was afraid it
+ was true, though I saw it filled on both sides. The Bishop of Clogher writ
+ me word you were in the country, and that he heard you were well: I am
+ glad at heart MD rides, and rides, and rides. Our hot weather ended in
+ May, and all this month has been moderate: it was then so hot I was not
+ able to endure it; I was miserable every moment, and found myself disposed
+ to be peevish and quarrelsome: I believe a very hot country would make me
+ stark mad.&mdash;Yes, my head continues pretty tolerable, and I impute it
+ all to walking. Does Stella eat fruit? I eat a little; but I always
+ repent, and resolve against it. No, in very hot weather I always go to
+ town by water; but I constantly walk back, for then the sun is down. And
+ so Mrs. Proby(13) goes with you to Wexford: she's admirable company;
+ you'll grow plaguy wise with those you frequent. Mrs. Taylor and Mrs.
+ Proby! take care of infection. I believe my two hundred pounds will be
+ paid, but that Sir Alexander Cairnes is a scrupulous puppy: I left the
+ bill with Mr. Stratford, who is to have the money. Now, Madam Stella, what
+ say you? you ride every day; I know that already, sirrah; and, if you rid
+ every day for a twelvemonth, you would be still better and better. No, I
+ hope Parvisol will not have the impudence to make you stay an hour for the
+ money; if he does, I'll UN-PARVISOL him; pray let me know. O Lord, how
+ hasty we are! Stella can't stay writing and writing; she must write and go
+ a cock-horse, pray now. Well, but the horses are not come to the door; the
+ fellow can't find the bridle; your stirrup is broken; where did you put
+ the whips, Dingley? Marget, where have you laid Mrs. Johnson's ribbon to
+ tie about her? reach me my mask: sup up this before you go. So, so, a
+ gallop, a gallop: sit fast, sirrah, and don't ride hard upon the stones.&mdash;Well,
+ now Stella is gone, tell me, Dingley, is she a good girl? and what news is
+ that you are to tell me?&mdash;No, I believe the box is not lost: Sterne
+ says it is not.&mdash;No, faith, you must go to Wexford without seeing
+ your Duke of Ormond, unless you stay on purpose; perhaps you may be so
+ wise.&mdash;I tell you this is your sixteenth letter; will you never be
+ satisfied? No, no, I will walk late no more; I ought less to venture it
+ than other people, and so I was told: but I will return to lodge in town
+ next Thursday. When you come from Wexford, I would have you send a letter
+ of attorney to Mr. Benjamin Tooke, bookseller, in London, directed to me;
+ and he shall manage your affair. I have your parchment safely locked up in
+ London.&mdash;O, Madam Stella, welcome home; was it pleasant riding? did
+ your horse stumble? how often did the man light to settle your stirrup?
+ ride nine miles! faith, you have galloped indeed. Well, but where is the
+ fine thing you promised me? I have been a good boy, ask Dingley else. I
+ believe you did not meet the fine-thing-man: faith, you are a cheat. So
+ you will see Raymond and his wife in town. Faith, that riding to Laracor
+ gives me short sighs, as well as you. All the days I have passed here have
+ been dirt to those. I have been gaining enemies by the scores, and friends
+ by the couples; which is against the rules of wisdom, because they say one
+ enemy can do more hurt than ten friends can do good. But I have had my
+ revenge at least, if I get nothing else. And so let Fate govern.&mdash;Now
+ I think your letter is answered; and mine will be shorter than ordinary,
+ because it must go to-day. We have had a great deal of scattering rain for
+ some days past, yet it hardly keeps down the dust.&mdash;We have plays
+ acted in our town; and Patrick was at one of them, oh oh. He was damnably
+ mauled one day when he was drunk; he was at cuffs with a brother-footman,
+ who dragged him along the floor upon his face, which looked for a week
+ after as if he had the leprosy; and I was glad enough to see it. I have
+ been ten times sending him over to you; yet now he has new clothes, and a
+ laced hat, which the hatter brought by his orders, and he offered to pay
+ for the lace out of his wages.&mdash;I am to dine to-day with Dilly at Sir
+ Andrew Fountaine's, who has bought a new house, and will be weary of it in
+ half a year. I must rise and shave, and walk to town, unless I go with the
+ Dean in his chariot at twelve, which is too late: and I have not seen that
+ Lord Peterborow yet. The Duke of Shrewsbury is almost well again, and will
+ be abroad in a day or two: what care you? There it is now: you do not care
+ for my friends. Farewell, my dearest lives and delights; I love you better
+ than ever, if possible, as hope saved, I do, and ever will. God Almighty
+ bless you ever, and make us happy together! I pray for this twice every
+ day; and I hope God will hear my poor hearty prayers.&mdash;Remember, if I
+ am used ill and ungratefully, as I have formerly been, 'tis what I am
+ prepared for, and shall not wonder at it. Yet I am now envied, and thought
+ in high favour, and have every day numbers of considerable men teasing me
+ to solicit for them. And the Ministry all use me perfectly well; and all
+ that know them say they love me. Yet I can count upon nothing, nor will,
+ but upon MD's love and kindness.&mdash;They think me useful; they
+ pretended they were afraid of none but me, and that they resolved to have
+ me; they have often confessed this: yet all makes little impression on me.&mdash;Pox
+ of these speculations! they give me the spleen; and that is a disease I
+ was not born to. Let me alone, sirrahs, and be satisfied: I am, as long as
+ MD and Presto are well.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Little wealth,
+ And much health,
+ And a life by stealth:
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ that is all we want; and so farewell, dearest MD; Stella, Dingley, Presto,
+ all together, now and for ever all together. Farewell again and again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0029" id="link2H_4_0029">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 26.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ CHELSEA, June 30, 1711.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ See what large paper I am forced to take, to write to MD; Patrick has
+ brought me none clipped; but, faith, the next shall be smaller. I dined
+ to-day, as I told you, with Dilly at Sir Andrew Fountaine's: there were we
+ wretchedly punning, and writing together to Lord Pembroke. Dilly is just
+ such a puppy as ever; and it is so uncouth, after so long an intermission.
+ My twenty-fifth is gone this evening to the post. I think I will direct my
+ next (which is this) to Mr. Curry's, and let them send it to Wexford; and
+ then the next enclosed to Reading. Instruct me how I shall do. I long to
+ hear from you from Wexford, and what sort of place it is. The town grows
+ very empty and dull. This evening I have had a letter from Mr. Philips,
+ the pastoral poet, to get him a certain employment from Lord Treasurer. I
+ have now had almost all the Whig poets my solicitors; and I have been
+ useful to Congreve, Steele, and Harrison: but I will do nothing for
+ Philips; I find he is more a puppy than ever, so don't solicit for him.
+ Besides, I will not trouble Lord Treasurer, unless upon some very
+ extraordinary occasion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ July 1. Dilly lies conveniently for me when I come to town from Chelsea of
+ a Sunday, and go to the Secretary's; so I called at his lodgings this
+ morning, and sent for my gown, and dressed myself there. He had a letter
+ from the Bishop, with an account that you were set out for Wexford the
+ morning he writ, which was June 26, and he had the letter the 30th; that
+ was very quick: the Bishop says you design to stay there two months or
+ more. Dilly had also a letter from Tom Ashe, full of Irish news; that your
+ Lady Lyndon(1) is dead, and I know not what besides of Dr. Coghill(2)
+ losing his drab, etc. The Secretary was gone to Windsor, and I dined with
+ Mrs. Vanhomrigh. Lord Treasurer is at Windsor too; they will be going and
+ coming all summer, while the Queen is there, and the town is empty, and I
+ fear I shall be sometimes forced to stoop beneath my dignity, and send to
+ the ale-house for a dinner. Well, sirrahs, had you a good journey to
+ Wexford? did you drink ale by the way? were you never overturned? how many
+ things did you forget? do you lie on straw in your new town where you are?
+ Cudshoe,(3) the next letter to Presto will be dated from Wexford. What
+ fine company have you there? what new acquaintance have you got? You are
+ to write constantly to Mrs. Walls and Mrs. Stoyte: and the Dean said,
+ "Shall we never hear from you?" "Yes, Mr. Dean, we'll make bold to trouble
+ you with a letter." Then at Wexford; when you meet a lady, "Did your
+ waters pass well this morning, madam?" Will Dingley drink them too? Yes, I
+ warrant; to get her a stomach. I suppose you are all gamesters at Wexford.
+ Do not lose your money, sirrah, far from home. I believe I shall go to
+ Windsor in a few days; at least, the Secretary tells me so. He has a small
+ house there, with just room enough for him and me; and I would be
+ satisfied to pass a few days there sometimes. Sirrahs, let me go to sleep,
+ it is past twelve in our town.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. Sterne came to me this morning, and tells me he has yet some hopes of
+ compassing his business: he was with Tom Harley, the secretary of the
+ Treasury, and made him doubt a little he was in the wrong; the poor man
+ tells me it will almost undo him if he fails. I called this morning to see
+ Will Congreve, who lives much by himself, is forced to read for amusement,
+ and cannot do it without a magnifying-glass. I have set him very well with
+ the Ministry, and I hope he is in no danger of losing his place. I dined
+ in the City with Dr. Freind, not among my merchants, but with a scrub
+ instrument of mischief of mine, whom I never mentioned to you, nor am like
+ to do. You two little saucy Wexfordians, you are now drinking waters. You
+ drink waters! you go fiddlestick. Pray God send them to do you good; if
+ not, faith, next summer you shall come to the Bath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. Lord Peterborow desired to see me this morning at nine; I had not seen
+ him before since he came home. I met Mrs. Manley(4) there, who was
+ soliciting him to get some pension or reward for her service in the cause,
+ by writing her Atalantis, and prosecution, etc., upon it. I seconded her,
+ and hope they will do something for the poor woman. My lord kept me two
+ hours upon politics: he comes home very sanguine; he has certainly done
+ great things at Savoy and Vienna, by his negotiations: he is violent
+ against a peace, and finds true what I writ to him, that the Ministry
+ seems for it. He reasons well; yet I am for a peace. I took leave of Lady
+ Kerry, who goes to-morrow for Ireland; she picks up Lord Shelburne and
+ Mrs. Pratt at Lord Shelburne's house. I was this evening with Lord
+ Treasurer: Tom Harley was there, and whispered me that he began to doubt
+ about Sterne's business; I told him he would find he was in the wrong. I
+ sat two or three hours at Lord Treasurer's; he rallied me sufficiently
+ upon my refusing to take him into our Club, and told a judge who was with
+ us that my name was Thomas Swift. I had a mind to prevent Sir H.
+ Belasyse(5) going to Spain, who is a most covetous cur, and I fell a
+ railing against avarice, and turned it so that he smoked me, and named
+ Belasyse. I went on, and said it was a shame to send him; to which he
+ agreed, but desired I would name some who understood business, and do not
+ love money, for he could not find them. I said there was something in a
+ Treasurer different from other men; that we ought not to make a man a
+ Bishop who does not love divinity, or a General who does not love war; and
+ I wondered why the Queen would make a man Lord Treasurer who does not love
+ money. He was mightily pleased with what I said. He was talking of the
+ First-Fruits of England, and I took occasion to tell him that I would not
+ for a thousand pounds anybody but he had got them for Ireland, who got
+ them for England too. He bid me consider what a thousand pounds was; I
+ said I would have him to know I valued a thousand pounds as little as he
+ valued a million.&mdash;Is it not silly to write all this? but it gives
+ you an idea what our conversation is with mixed company. I have taken a
+ lodging in Suffolk Street, and go to it on Thursday; and design to walk
+ the Park and the town, to supply my walking here: yet I will walk here
+ sometimes too, in a visit now and then to the Dean.(6) When I was almost
+ at home, Patrick told me he had two letters for me, and gave them to me in
+ the dark, yet I could see one of them was from saucy MD. I went to visit
+ the Dean for half an hour; and then came home, and first read the other
+ letter, which was from the Bishop of Clogher, who tells me the Archbishop
+ of Dublin mentioned in a full assembly of the clergy the Queen's granting
+ the First-Fruits, said it was done by the Lord Treasurer, and talked much
+ of my merit in it: but reading yours I find nothing of that: perhaps the
+ Bishop lies, out of a desire to please me. I dined with Mrs. Vanhomrigh.
+ Well, sirrahs, you are gone to Wexford; but I'll follow you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. Sterne came to me again this morning, to advise about reasons and
+ memorials he is drawing up; and we went to town by water together; and
+ having nothing to do, I stole into the City to an instrument of mine, and
+ then went to see poor Patty Rolt,(7) who has been in town these two months
+ with a cousin of hers. Her life passes with boarding in some country town
+ as cheap as she can, and, when she runs out, shifting to some cheaper
+ place, or coming to town for a month. If I were rich, I would ease her,
+ which a little thing would do. Some months ago I sent her a guinea, and it
+ patched up twenty circumstances. She is now going to Berkhamstead in
+ Hertfordshire. It has rained and hailed prodigiously to-day, with some
+ thunder. This is the last night I lie at Chelsea; and I got home early,
+ and sat two hours with the Dean, and ate victuals, having had a very
+ scurvy dinner. I'll answer your letter when I come to live in town. You
+ shall have a fine London answer: but first I will go sleep, and dream of
+ MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ London, July 5. This day I left Chelsea for good (that's a genteel
+ phrase), and am got into Suffolk Street. I dined to-day at our Society,
+ and we are adjourned for a month, because most of us go into the country:
+ we dined at Lord Keeper's with young Harcourt, and Lord Keeper was forced
+ to sneak off, and dine with Lord Treasurer, who had invited the Secretary
+ and me to dine with him; but we scorned to leave our company, as George
+ Granville did, whom we have threatened to expel: however, in the evening I
+ went to Lord Treasurer, and, among other company, found a couple of judges
+ with him; one of them, Judge Powell,(8) an old fellow with grey hairs, was
+ the merriest old gentleman I ever saw, spoke pleasant things, and laughed
+ and chuckled till he cried again. I stayed till eleven, because I was not
+ now to walk to Chelsea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. An ugly rainy day. I was to visit Mrs. Barton, then called at Mrs.
+ Vanhomrigh's, where Sir Andrew Fountaine and the rain kept me to dinner;
+ and there did I loiter all the afternoon, like a fool, out of perfect
+ laziness, and the weather not permitting me to walk: but I'll do so no
+ more. Are your waters at Wexford good in this rain? I long to hear how you
+ are established there, how and whom you visit, what is your lodging, what
+ are your entertainments. You are got far southwards; but I think you must
+ eat no fruit while you drink the waters. I ate some Kentish cherries
+ t'other day, and I repent it already; I have felt my head a little
+ disordered. We had not a hot day all June, or since, which I reckon a
+ mighty happiness. Have you left a direction with Reading for Wexford? I
+ will, as I said, direct this to Curry's, and the next to Reading; or
+ suppose I send this at a venture straight to Wexford? It would vex me to
+ have it miscarry. I had a letter to-night from Parvisol, that White has
+ paid me most of my remaining money; and another from Joe, that they have
+ had their election at Trim, but not a word of who is chosen portreeve.(9)
+ Poor Joe is full of complaints, says he has enemies, and fears he will
+ never get his two hundred pounds; and I fear so too, although I have done
+ what I could.&mdash;I'll answer your letter when I think fit, when saucy
+ Presto thinks fit, sirrahs. I am not at leisure yet; when I have nothing
+ to do, perhaps I may vouchsafe.&mdash;O Lord, the two Wexford ladies; I'll
+ go dream of you both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. It was the dismallest rainy day I ever saw: I went to the Secretary in
+ the morning, and he was gone to Windsor. Then it began raining, and I
+ struck in to Mrs. Vanhomrigh's, and dined, and stayed till night very dull
+ and insipid. I hate this town in summer; I'll leave it for a while, if I
+ can have time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. I have a fellow of your town, one Tisdall,(10) lodges in the same house
+ with me. Patrick told me Squire Tisdall and his lady lodged here. I
+ pretended I never heard of him; but I knew his ugly face, and saw him at
+ church in the next pew to me, and he often looked for a bow, but it would
+ not do. I think he lives in Capel Street, and has an ugly fine wife in a
+ fine coach. Dr. Freind and I dined in the City by invitation, and I drank
+ punch, very good, but it makes me hot. People here are troubled with agues
+ by this continuance of wet, cold weather; but I am glad to find the season
+ so temperate. I was this evening to see Will Congreve, who is a very
+ agreeable companion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. I was to-day in the City, and dined with Mr. Stratford, who tells me
+ Sir Alexander Cairnes makes difficulties about paying my bill; so that I
+ cannot give order yet to Parvisol to deliver up the bond to Dr. Raymond.
+ To-morrow I shall have a positive answer: that Cairnes is a shuffling
+ scoundrel; and several merchants have told me so: what can one expect from
+ a Scot and a fanatic? I was at Bateman's the bookseller's, to see a fine
+ old library he has bought; and my fingers itched, as yours would do at a
+ china-shop; but I resisted, and found everything too dear, and I have
+ fooled away too much money that way already. So go and drink your waters,
+ saucy rogue, and make yourself well; and pray walk while you are there: I
+ have a notion there is never a good walk in Ireland.(11) Do you find all
+ places without trees? Pray observe the inhabitants about Wexford; they are
+ old English; see what they have particular in their manners, names, and
+ language: magpies have been always there, and nowhere else in Ireland,
+ till of late years. They say the cocks and dogs go to sleep at noon, and
+ so do the people. Write your travels, and bring home good eyes and health.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. I dined to-day with Lord Treasurer: we did not sit down till four. I
+ despatched three businesses with him, and forgot a fourth. I think I have
+ got a friend an employment; and besides I made him consent to let me bring
+ Congreve to dine with him. You must understand I have a mind to do a small
+ thing, only turn out all the Queen's physicians; for in my conscience they
+ will soon kill her among them. And I must talk over that matter with some
+ people. My Lord Treasurer told me the Queen and he between them have lost
+ the paper about the First-Fruits, but desires I will let the bishops know
+ it shall be done with the first opportunity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. I dined to-day with neighbour Van, and walked pretty well in the Park
+ this evening. Stella, hussy, don't you remember, sirrah, you used to
+ reproach me about meddling in other folk's affairs? I have enough of it
+ now: two people came to me to-night in the Park to engage to speak to Lord
+ Treasurer in their behalf, and I believe they make up fifty who have asked
+ me the same favour. I am hardened, and resolve to trouble him, or any
+ other Minister, less than ever. And I observe those who have ten times
+ more credit than I will not speak a word for anybody. I met yesterday the
+ poor lad I told you of, who lived with Mr. Tenison,(12) who has been ill
+ of an ague ever since I saw him. He looked wretchedly, and was exceeding
+ thankful for half a crown I gave him. He had a crown from me before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. I dined to-day with young Manley(13) in the City, who is to get me out
+ a box of books and a hamper of wine from Hamburg. I inquired of Mr.
+ Stratford, who tells me that Cairnes has not yet paid my two hundred
+ pounds, but shams and delays from day to day. Young Manley's wife is a
+ very indifferent person of a young woman, goggle-eyed, and looks like a
+ fool: yet he is a handsome fellow, and married her for love after long
+ courtship, and she refused him until he got his last employment.&mdash;I
+ believe I shall not be so good a boy for writing as I was during your stay
+ at Wexford, unless I may send my letters every second time to Curry's;
+ pray let me know. This, I think, shall go there: or why not to Wexford
+ itself? That is right, and so it shall this next Tuesday, although it
+ costs you tenpence. What care I?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. This toad of a Secretary is come from Windsor, and I cannot find him;
+ and he goes back on Sunday, and I can't see him to-morrow. I dined
+ scurvily to-day with Mr. Lewis and a parson; and then went to see Lord
+ Treasurer, and met him coming from his house in his coach: he smiled, and
+ I shrugged, and we smoked each other; and so my visit is paid. I now
+ confine myself to see him only twice a week: he has invited me to Windsor,
+ and betwixt two stools, etc. I will go live at Windsor, if possible,
+ that's pozzz. I have always the luck to pass my summer in London. I called
+ this evening to see poor Sir Matthew Dudley, a Commissioner of the
+ Customs; I know he is to be out for certain: he is in hopes of continuing:
+ I would not tell him bad news, but advised him to prepare for the worst.
+ Dilly was with me this morning, to invite me to dine at Kensington on
+ Sunday with Lord Mountjoy, who goes soon for Ireland. Your late
+ Chief-Justice Broderick(14) is here, and they say violent as a tiger. How
+ is party among you at Wexford? Are the majority of ladies for the late or
+ present Ministry? Write me Wexford news, and love Presto, because he is a
+ good boy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. Although it was shaving-day, I walked to Chelsea, and was there by
+ nine this morning; and the Dean of Carlisle and I crossed the water to
+ Battersea, and went in his chariot to Greenwich, where we dined at Dr.
+ Gastrell's, and passed the afternoon at Lewisham, at the Dean of
+ Canterbury's;(15) and there I saw Moll Stanhope,(16) who is grown
+ monstrously tall, but not so handsome as formerly. It is the first little
+ rambling journey I have had this summer about London, and they are the
+ agreeablest pastimes one can have, in a friend's coach, and to good
+ company. Bank Stock is fallen three or four per cent. by the whispers
+ about the town of the Queen's being ill, who is however very well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. How many books have you carried with you to Wexford? What, not one
+ single book? Oh, but your time will be so taken up; and you can borrow of
+ the parson. I dined to-day with Sir Andrew Fountaine and Dilly at
+ Kensington with Lord Mountjoy; and in the afternoon Stratford came there,
+ and told me my two hundred pounds were paid at last; so that business is
+ over, and I am at ease about it; and I wish all your money was in the Bank
+ too. I will have my other hundred pounds there, that is in Hawkshaw's
+ hands. Have you had the interest of it paid yet? I ordered Parvisol to do
+ it. What makes Presto write so crooked? I will answer your letter
+ to-morrow, and send it on Tuesday. Here's hot weather come again,
+ yesterday and to-day: fine drinking waters now. We had a sad pert dull
+ parson at Kensington to-day. I almost repent my coming to town; I want the
+ walks I had.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. I dined in the City to-day with a hedge(17) acquaintance, and the day
+ passed without any consequence. I will answer your letter to-morrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. Morning. I have put your letter before me, and am going to answer it.
+ Hold your tongue: stand by. Your weather and ours were not alike; we had
+ not a bit of hot weather in June, yet you complain of it on the 19th day.
+ What, you used to love hot weather then? I could never endure it: I detest
+ and abominate it. I would not live in a hot country, to be king of it.
+ What a splutter you keep about my bonds with Raymond, and all to affront
+ Presto! Presto will be suspicious of everything but MD, in spite of your
+ little nose. Soft and fair, Madam Stella, how you gallop away, in your
+ spleen and your rage, about repenting my journey, and preferment here, and
+ sixpence a dozen, and nasty England, and Laracor all my life. Hey-dazy,
+ will you never have done? I had no offers of any living. Lord Keeper told
+ me some months ago he would give me one when I pleased; but I told him I
+ would not take any from him; and the Secretary told me t'other day he had
+ refused a very good one for me, but it was in a place he did not like; and
+ I know nothing of getting anything here, and, if they would give me leave,
+ I would come over just now. Addison, I hear, has changed his mind about
+ going over; but I have not seen him these four months.&mdash;Oh ay, that's
+ true, Dingley; that's like herself: millions of businesses to do before
+ she goes. Yes, my head has been pretty well, but threatening within these
+ two or three days, which I impute to some fruit I ate; but I will eat no
+ more: not a bit of any sort. I suppose you had a journey without dust, and
+ that was happy. I long for a Wexford letter, but must not think of it yet:
+ your last was finished but three weeks ago. It is d&mdash;&mdash;d news
+ you tell me of Mrs. F&mdash;&mdash;; it makes me love England less a great
+ deal. I know nothing of the trunk being left or taken; so 'tis odd enough,
+ if the things in it were mine; and I think I was told that there are some
+ things for me that my mother left particularly to me. I am really sorry
+ for &mdash;&mdash;-; that scoundrel &mdash;&mdash;- will have his estate
+ after his mother's death. Let me know if Mrs. Walls has got her tea: I
+ hope Richardson(18) stayed in Dublin till it came. Mrs. Walls needed not
+ have that blemish in her eye; for I am not in love with her at all. No, I
+ do not like anything in the Examiner after the 45th, except the first part
+ of the 46th;(19) all the rest is trash; and if you like them, especially
+ the 47th, your judgment is spoiled by ill company and want of reading,
+ which I am more sorry for than you think: and I have spent fourteen years
+ in improving you to little purpose. (Mr. Tooke is come here, and I must
+ stop.)&mdash;At night. I dined with Lord Treasurer to-day, and he kept me
+ till nine; so I cannot send this to-night, as I intended, nor write some
+ other letters. Green,(20) his surgeon, was there, and dressed his breast;
+ that is, put on a plaster, which is still requisite: and I took an
+ opportunity to speak to him of the Queen; but he cut me short with this
+ saying, "Laissez faire a Don Antoine," which is a French proverb,
+ expressing, "Leave that to me." I find he is against her taking much
+ physic; and I doubt he cannot persuade her to take Dr. Radcliffe. However,
+ she is very well now, and all the story of her illness, except the first
+ day or two, was a lie. We had some business, that company hindered us from
+ doing, though he is earnest for it, yet would not appoint me a certain
+ day, but bids me come at all times till we can have leisure. This takes up
+ a great deal of my time, and I can do nothing I would do for them. I was
+ with the Secretary this morning, and we both think to go to Windsor for
+ some days, to despatch an affair, if we can have leisure. Sterne met me
+ just now in the street by his lodgings, and I went in for an hour to Jemmy
+ Leigh, who loves London dearly: he asked after you with great respect and
+ friendship.&mdash;To return to your letter. Your Bishop Mills(21) hates me
+ mortally: I wonder he should speak well of me, having abused me in all
+ places where he went. So you pay your way. Cudsho: you had a fine supper,
+ I warrant; two pullets, and a bottle of wine, and some currants.&mdash;It
+ is just three weeks to-day since you set out to Wexford; you were three
+ days going, and I do not expect a letter these ten days yet, or rather
+ this fortnight. I got a grant of the Gazette(22) for Ben Tooke this
+ morning from Mr. Secretary: it will be worth to him a hundred pounds a
+ year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. To-day I took leave of Mrs. Barton, who is going into the country; and
+ I dined with Sir John Stanley,(23) where I have not been this great while.
+ There dined with us Lord Rochester, and his fine daughter, Lady Jane,(24)
+ just growing a top-toast. I have been endeavouring to save Sir Matthew
+ Dudley,(25) but fear I cannot. I walked the Mall six times to-night for
+ exercise, and would have done more; but, as empty as the town is, a fool
+ got hold of me, and so I came home, to tell you this shall go to-morrow,
+ without fail, and follow you to Wexford, like a dog.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. Dean Atterbury sent to me to dine with him at Chelsea. I refused his
+ coach, and walked, and am come back by seven, because I would finish this
+ letter, and some others I am writing. Patrick tells me the maid says one
+ Mr. Walls, a clergyman, a tall man, was here to visit me. Is it your Irish
+ Archdeacon? I shall be sorry for it; but I shall make shift to see him
+ seldom enough, as I do Dilly. What can he do here? or is it somebody else?
+ The Duke of Newcastle(26) is dead by the fall he had from his horse. God
+ send poor Stella her health, and keep MD happy! Farewell, and love Presto,
+ who loves MD above all things ten million of times. God bless the dear
+ Wexford girls. Farewell again, etc. etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0030" id="link2H_4_0030">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 27.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, July 19, 1711.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I have just sent my 26th, and have nothing to say, because I have other
+ letters to write (pshaw, I began too high); but I must lay the beginning
+ like a nest-egg: to-morrow I will say more, and fetch up this line to be
+ straight. This is enough at present for two dear saucy naughty girls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. Have I told you that Walls has been with me, and leaves the town in
+ three days? He has brought no gown with him. Dilly carried him to a play.
+ He has come upon a foolish errand, and goes back as he comes. I was this
+ day with Lord Peterborow, who is going another ramble: I believe I told
+ you so. I dined with Lord Treasurer, but cannot get him to do his own
+ business with me; he has put me off till to-morrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21, 22. I dined yesterday with Lord Treasurer, who would needs take me
+ along with him to Windsor, although I refused him several times, having no
+ linen, etc. I had just time to desire Lord Forbes(1) to call at my lodging
+ and order my man to send my things to-day to Windsor by his servant. I lay
+ last night at the Secretary's lodgings at Windsor, and borrowed one of his
+ shirts to go to Court in. The Queen is very well. I dined with Mr. Masham;
+ and not hearing anything of my things, I got Lord Winchelsea to bring me
+ to town. Here I found that Patrick had broke open the closet to get my
+ linen and nightgown, and sent them to Windsor, and there they are; and he,
+ not thinking I would return so soon, is gone upon his rambles: so here I
+ am left destitute, and forced to borrow a nightgown of my landlady, and
+ have not a rag to put on to-morrow: faith, it gives me the spleen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23. Morning. It is a terrible rainy day, and rained prodigiously on
+ Saturday night. Patrick lay out last night, and is not yet returned:
+ faith, poor Presto is a desolate creature; neither servant, nor linen, nor
+ anything.&mdash;Night. Lord Forbes's man has brought back my portmantua,
+ and Patrick is come; so I am in Christian circumstances: I shall hardly
+ commit such a frolic again. I just crept out to Mrs. Van's, and dined, and
+ stayed there the afternoon: it has rained all this day. Windsor is a
+ delicious place: I never saw it before, except for an hour about seventeen
+ years ago. Walls has been here in my absence, I suppose, to take his
+ leave; for he designed not to stay above five days in London. He says he
+ and his wife will come here for some months next year; and, in short, he
+ dares not stay now for fear of her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24. I dined to-day with a hedge(2) friend in the City; and Walls overtook
+ me in the street, and told me he was just getting on horseback for
+ Chester. He has as much curiosity as a cow: he lodged with his horse in
+ Aldersgate Street: he has bought his wife a silk gown, and himself a hat.
+ And what are you doing? what is poor MD doing now? how do you pass your
+ time at Wexford? how do the waters agree with you? Let Presto know soon;
+ for Presto longs to know, and must know. Is not Madam Proby curious
+ company? I am afraid this rainy weather will spoil your waters. We have
+ had a great deal of wet these three days. Tell me all the particulars of
+ Wexford: the place, the company, the diversions, the victuals, the wants,
+ the vexations. Poor Dingley never saw such a place in her life; sent all
+ over the town for a little parsley to a boiled chicken, and it was not to
+ be had; the butter is stark naught, except an old English woman's; and it
+ is such a favour to get a pound from her now and then! I am glad you
+ carried down your sheets with you, else you must have lain in sackcloth. O
+ Lord!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25. I was this forenoon with Mr. Secretary at his office, and helped to
+ hinder a man of his pardon, who is condemned for a rape. The Under
+ Secretary was willing to save him, upon an old notion that a woman cannot
+ be ravished; but I told the Secretary he could not pardon him without a
+ favourable report from the judge; besides, he was a fiddler, and
+ consequently a rogue, and deserved hanging for some thing else; and so he
+ shall swing. What, I must stand up for the honour of the fair sex! 'Tis
+ true the fellow had lain with her a hundred times before, but what care I
+ for that! What, must a woman be ravished because she is a whore?&mdash;The
+ Secretary and I go on Saturday to Windsor for a week. I dined with Lord
+ Treasurer, and stayed with him till past ten. I was to-day at his levee,
+ where I went against my custom, because I had a mind to do a good office
+ for a gentleman: so I talked with him before my lord, that he might see
+ me, and then found occasion to recommend him this afternoon. I was forced
+ to excuse my coming to the levee, that I did it to see the sight; for he
+ was going to chide me away: I had never been there but once, and that was
+ long before he was Treasurer. The rooms were all full, and as many Whigs
+ as Tories. He whispered me a jest or two, and bid me come to dinner. I
+ left him but just now; and 'tis late.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26. Mr. Addison and I have at last met again. I dined with him and Steele
+ to-day at young Jacob Tonson's. The two Jacobs(3) think it is I who have
+ made the Secretary take from them the printing of the Gazette, which they
+ are going to lose, and Ben Tooke and another(4) are to have it. Jacob came
+ to me the other day, to make his court; but I told him it was too late,
+ and that it was not my doing. I reckon they will lose it in a week or two.
+ Mr. Addison and I talked as usual, and as if we had seen one another
+ yesterday; and Steele and I were very easy, though I writ him lately a
+ biting letter, in answer to one of his, where he desired me to recommend a
+ friend of his to Lord Treasurer. Go, get you gone to your waters, sirrah.
+ Do they give you a stomach? Do you eat heartily?&mdash;We have had much
+ rain to-day and yesterday.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27. I dined to-day in the City, and saw poor Patty Rolt, and gave her a
+ pistole to help her a little forward against she goes to board in the
+ country. She has but eighteen pounds a year to live on, and is forced to
+ seek out for cheap places. Sometimes they raise their price, and sometimes
+ they starve her, and then she is forced to shift. Patrick the puppy put
+ too much ink in my standish,(5) and, carrying too many things together, I
+ spilled it on my paper and floor. The town is dull, wet, and empty;
+ Wexford is worth two of it; I hope so at least, and that poor little MD
+ finds it so. I reckon upon going to Windsor to-morrow with Mr. Secretary,
+ unless he changes his mind, or some other business prevents him. I shall
+ stay there a week, I hope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28. Morning. Mr. Secretary sent me word he will call at my lodgings by two
+ this afternoon, to take me to Windsor; so I must dine nowhere; and I
+ promised Lord Treasurer to dine with him to-day; but I suppose we shall
+ dine at Windsor at five, for we make but three hours there.(6) I am going
+ abroad, but have left Patrick to put up my things, and to be sure to be at
+ home half an hour before two.&mdash;Windsor, at night. We did not leave
+ London till three, and dined here between six and seven; at nine I left
+ the company, and went to see Lord Treasurer, who is just come. I chid him
+ for coming so late; he chid me for not dining with him; said he stayed an
+ hour for me. Then I went and sat with Mr. Lewis till just now, and it is
+ past eleven. I lie in the same house with the Secretary, one of the
+ Prebendary's houses. The Secretary is not come from his apartment in the
+ Castle. Do you think that abominable dog Patrick was out after two to-day,
+ and I in a fright every moment, for fear the chariot should come; and when
+ he came in, he had not put up one rag of my things! I never was in a
+ greater passion, and would certainly have cropped one of his ears, if I
+ had not looked every moment for the Secretary, who sent his equipage to my
+ lodging before, and came in a chair from Whitehall to me, and happened to
+ stay half an hour later than he intended. One of Lord Treasurer's servants
+ gave me a letter to-night: I found it was from &mdash;&mdash;, with an
+ offer of fifty pounds, to be paid me in what manner I pleased; because, he
+ said, he desired to be well with me. I was in a rage;(7) but my friend
+ Lewis cooled me, and said it is what the best men sometimes meet with; and
+ I have been not seldom served in the like manner, although not so grossly.
+ In these cases I never demur a moment, nor ever found the least
+ inclination to take anything. Well, I will go try to sleep in my new bed,
+ and to dream of poor Wexford MD, and Stella that drinks water, and Dingley
+ that drinks ale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29. I was at Court and church to-day, as I was this day se'ennight: I
+ generally am acquainted with about thirty in the drawing-room, and I am so
+ proud I make all the lords come up to me: one passes half an hour pleasant
+ enough. We had a dunce to preach before the Queen to-day, which often
+ happens. Windsor is a delicious situation, but the town is scoundrel. I
+ have this morning got the Gazette for Ben Tooke and one Barber a printer;
+ it will be about three hundred pounds a year between them. The other
+ fellow was printer of the Examiner, which is now laid down.(8) I dined
+ with the Secretary: we were a dozen in all, three Scotch lords, and Lord
+ Peterborow. The Duke of Hamilton(9) would needs be witty, and hold up my
+ train as I walked upstairs. It is an ill circumstance that on Sundays much
+ company always meet at the great tables. Lord Treasurer told at Court what
+ I said to Mr. Secretary on this occasion. The Secretary showed me his bill
+ of fare, to encourage me to dine with him. "Poh," said I, "show me a bill
+ of company, for I value not your dinner." See how this is all blotted,(10)
+ I can write no more here, but to tell you I love MD dearly, and God bless
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30. In my conscience, I fear I shall have the gout. I sometimes feel pains
+ about my feet and toes: I never drank till within these two years, and I
+ did it to cure my head. I often sit evenings with some of these people,
+ and drink in my turn; but I am now resolved to drink ten times less than
+ before; but they advise me to let what I drink be all wine, and not to put
+ water to it. Tooke and the printer stayed to-day to finish their affair,
+ and treated me and two of the Under Secretaries upon their getting the
+ Gazette. Then I went to see Lord Treasurer, and chid him for not taking
+ notice of me at Windsor. He said he kept a place for me yesterday at
+ dinner, and expected me there; but I was glad I did not go, because the
+ Duke of Buckingham was there, and that would have made us acquainted;
+ which I have no mind to. However, we appointed to sup at Mr. Masham's, and
+ there stayed till past one o'clock; and that is late, sirrahs: and I have
+ much business.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 31. I have sent a noble haunch of venison this afternoon to Mrs.
+ Vanhomrigh: I wish you had it, sirrahs. I dined gravely with my landlord
+ the Secretary. The Queen was abroad to-day in order to hunt; but, finding
+ it disposed to rain, she kept in her coach; she hunts in a chaise with one
+ horse, which she drives herself, and drives furiously, like Jehu, and is a
+ mighty hunter, like Nimrod. Dingley has heard of Nimrod, but not Stella,
+ for it is in the Bible. I was to-day at Eton, which is but just cross the
+ bridge, to see my Lord Kerry's son,(11) who is at school there. Mr.
+ Secretary has given me a warrant for a buck; I can't send it to MD. It is
+ a sad thing, faith, considering how Presto loves MD, and how MD would love
+ Presto's venison for Presto's sake. God bless the two dear Wexford girls!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Aug. 1. We had for dinner the fellow of that haunch of venison I sent to
+ London; 'twas mighty fat and good, and eight people at dinner; that was
+ bad. The Queen and I were going to take the air this afternoon, but not
+ together; and were both hindered by a sudden rain. Her coaches and chaises
+ all went back, and the guards too; and I scoured into the market-place for
+ shelter. I intended to have walked up the finest avenue I ever saw, two
+ miles long, with two rows of elms on each side. I walked in the evening a
+ little upon the terrace, and came home at eight: Mr. Secretary came soon
+ after, and we were engaging in deep discourse, and I was endeavouring to
+ settle some points of the greatest consequence, and had wormed myself
+ pretty well into him, when his Under Secretary came in (who lodges in the
+ same house with us) and interrupted all my scheme. I have just left him:
+ it is late, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. I have been now five days at Windsor, and Patrick has been drunk three
+ times that I have seen, and oftener I believe. He has lately had clothes
+ that have cost me five pounds, and the dog thinks he has the whip-hand of
+ me: he begins to master me; so now I am resolved to part with him, and
+ will use him without the least pity. The Secretary and I have been walking
+ three or four hours to-day. The Duchess of Shrewsbury(12) asked him, was
+ not that Dr.&mdash;Dr.&mdash;and she could not say my name in English, but
+ said Dr. Presto, which is Italian for Swift. Whimsical enough, as Billy
+ Swift(13) says. I go to-morrow with the Secretary to his house at
+ Bucklebury, twenty-five miles from hence, and return early on Sunday
+ morning. I will leave this letter behind me locked up, and give you an
+ account of my journey when I return. I had a letter yesterday from the
+ Bishop of Clogher, who is coming up to his Parliament. Have you any
+ correspondence with him to Wexford? Methinks, I now long for a letter from
+ you, dated Wexford, July 24, etc. O Lord, that would be so pretending;(14)
+ and then, says you, Stella can't write much, because it is bad to write
+ when one drinks the waters; and I think, says you, I find myself better
+ already, but I cannot tell yet whether it be the journey or the waters.
+ Presto is so silly to-night; yes he be; but Presto loves MD dearly, as
+ hope saved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. Morning. I am to go this day at noon, as I told you, to Bucklebury: we
+ dine at twelve, and expect to be there in four hours. I cannot bid you
+ good-night now, because I shall be twenty-five miles from this paper
+ to-night, and so my journal must have a break; so good-morrow, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4, 5. I dined yesterday at Bucklebury, where we lay two nights, and set
+ out this morning at eight, and were here at twelve; in four hours we went
+ twenty-six miles. Mr. Secretary was a perfect country gentleman at
+ Bucklebury: he smoked tobacco with one or two neighbours; he inquired
+ after the wheat in such a field; he went to visit his hounds, and knew all
+ their names; he and his lady saw me to my chamber just in the country
+ fashion. His house is in the midst of near three thousand pounds a year he
+ had by his lady,(15) who is descended from Jack Newbury, of whom books and
+ ballads are written; and there is an old picture of him in the house. She
+ is a great favourite of mine. I lost church to-day; but I dressed and
+ shaved, and went to Court, and would not dine with the Secretary, but
+ engaged myself to a private dinner with Mr. Lewis, and one friend more. We
+ go to London to-morrow; for Lord Dartmouth, the other Secretary, is come,
+ and they are here their weeks by turns.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. Lord Treasurer comes every Saturday to Windsor, and goes away on Monday
+ or Tuesday. I was with him this morning at his levee, for one cannot see
+ him otherwise here, he is so hurried: we had some talk; and I told him I
+ would stay this week at Windsor by myself, where I can have more leisure
+ to do some business that concerns them. Lord Treasurer and the Secretary
+ thought to mortify me; for they told me they had been talking a great deal
+ of me to-day to the Queen, and she said she had never heard of me. I told
+ them that was their fault, and not hers, etc., and so we laughed. I dined
+ with the Secretary, and let him go to London at five without me; and here
+ am I alone in the Prebendary's house, which Mr. Secretary has taken; only
+ Mr. Lewis is in my neighbourhood, and we shall be good company. The
+ Vice-Chamberlain,(16) and Mr. Masham, and the Green Cloth,(17) have
+ promised me dinners. I shall want but four till Mr. Secretary returns. We
+ have a music-meeting in our town to-night. I went to the rehearsal of it,
+ and there was Margarita,(18) and her sister, and another drab, and a
+ parcel of fiddlers: I was weary, and would not go to the meeting, which I
+ am sorry for, because I heard it was a great assembly. Mr. Lewis came from
+ it, and sat with me till just now; and 'tis late.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. I can do no business, I fear, because Mr. Lewis, who has nothing or
+ little to do here, sticks close to me. I dined today with the gentlemen
+ ushers, among scurvy company; but the Queen was hunting the stag till four
+ this afternoon, and she drove in her chaise above forty miles, and it was
+ five before we went to dinner. Here are fine walks about this town. I
+ sometimes walk up the avenue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. There was a Drawing-room to-day at Court; but so few company, that the
+ Queen sent for us into her bed-chamber, where we made our bows, and stood
+ about twenty of us round the room, while she looked at us round with her
+ fan in her mouth, and once a minute said about three words to some that
+ were nearest her, and then she was told dinner was ready, and went out. I
+ dined at the Green Cloth, by Mr. Scarborow's(19) invitation, who is in
+ waiting. It is much the best table in England, and costs the Queen a
+ thousand pounds a month while she is at Windsor or Hampton Court, and is
+ the only mark of magnificence or hospitality I can see in the Queen's
+ family: it is designed to entertain foreign Ministers, and people of
+ quality, who come to see the Queen, and have no place to dine at.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. Mr. Coke, the Vice-Chamberlain, made me a long visit this morning, and
+ invited me to dinner; but the toast, his lady,(20) was unfortunately
+ engaged to Lady Sunderland.(21) Lord Treasurer stole here last night, but
+ did not lie at his lodgings in the Castle; and, after seeing the Queen,
+ went back again. I just drank a dish of chocolate with him. I fancy I
+ shall have reason to be angry with him very soon; but what care I? I
+ believe I shall die with Ministries in my debt.&mdash;This night I
+ received a certain letter from a place called Wexford, from two dear
+ naughty girls of my acquaintance; but, faith, I will not answer it here,
+ no in troth. I will send this to Mr. Reading, supposing it will find you
+ returned; and I hope better for the waters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. Mr. Vice-Chamberlain lent me his horses to ride about and see the
+ country this morning. Dr. Arbuthnot, the Queen's physician and favourite,
+ went out with me to show me the places: we went a little after the Queen,
+ and overtook Miss Forester,(22) a maid of honour, on her palfrey, taking
+ the air; we made her go along with us. We saw a place they have made for a
+ famous horse-race to-morrow, where the Queen will come. We met the Queen
+ coming back, and Miss Forester stood, like us, with her hat off while the
+ Queen went by. The Doctor and I left the lady where we found her, but
+ under other conductors; and we dined at a little place he has taken, about
+ a mile off.&mdash;When I came back I found Mr. Scarborow had sent all
+ about to invite me to the Green Cloth, and lessened his company on purpose
+ to make me easy. It is very obliging, and will cost me thanks. Much
+ company is come to town this evening, to see to-morrow's race. I was tired
+ with riding a trotting mettlesome horse a dozen miles, having not been on
+ horseback this twelvemonth. And Miss Forester did not make it easier; she
+ is a silly true maid of honour, and I did not like her, although she be a
+ toast, and was dressed like a man.(23)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. I will send this letter to-day. I expect the Secretary by noon. I will
+ not go to the race unless I can get room in some coach. It is now morning.
+ I must rise, and fold up and seal my letter. Farewell, and God preserve
+ dearest MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I believe I shall leave this town on Monday.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0031" id="link2H_4_0031">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 28.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ WINDSOR, Aug. 11, 1711.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I sent away my twenty-seventh this morning in an express to London, and
+ directed to Mr. Reading: this shall go to your lodgings, where I reckon
+ you will be returned before it reaches you. I intended to go to the
+ race(1) to-day, but was hindered by a visit: I believe I told you so in my
+ last. I dined to-day at the Green Cloth, where everybody had been at the
+ race but myself, and we were twenty in all, and very noisy company; but I
+ made the Vice-Chamberlain and two friends more sit at a side table, to be
+ a little quiet. At six I went to see the Secretary, who is returned; but
+ Lord Keeper sent to desire I would sup with him, where I stayed till just
+ now: Lord Treasurer and Secretary were to come to us, but both failed.
+ 'Tis late, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. I was this morning to visit Lord Keeper, who made me reproaches that I
+ had never visited him at Windsor. He had a present sent him of delicious
+ peaches, and he was champing and champing, but I durst not eat one; I
+ wished Dingley had some of them, for poor Stella can no more eat fruit
+ than Presto. Dilly Ashe is come to Windsor; and after church I carried him
+ up to the drawing-room, and talked to the Keeper and Treasurer, on purpose
+ to show them to him; and he saw the Queen and several great lords, and the
+ Duchess of Montagu;(2) he was mighty happy, and resolves to fill a letter
+ to the Bishop.(3) My friend Lewis and I dined soberly with Dr. Adams,(4)
+ the only neighbour prebendary. One of the prebendaries here is lately a
+ peer, by the death of his father. He is now Lord Willoughby of Broke,(5)
+ and will sit in the House of Lords with his gown. I supped to-night at
+ Masham's with Lord Treasurer, Mr. Secretary, and Prior. The Treasurer made
+ us stay till twelve, before he came from the Queen, and 'tis now past two.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. I reckoned upon going to London to-day; but by an accident the Cabinet
+ Council did not sit last night, and sat to-day, so we go to-morrow at six
+ in the morning. I missed the race to-day by coming out too late, when
+ everybody's coach was gone, and ride I would not: I felt my last riding
+ three days after. We had a dinner to-day at the Secretary's lodgings
+ without him: Mr. Hare,(6) his Under Secretary, Mr. Lewis, Brigadier
+ Sutton,(7) and I, dined together; and I made the Vice-Chamberlain take a
+ snap with us, rather than stay till five for his lady, who was gone to the
+ race. The reason why the Cabinet Council was not held last night was
+ because Mr. Secretary St. John would not sit with your Duke of
+ Somerset.(8) So to-day the Duke was forced to go to the race while the
+ Cabinet was held. We have music-meetings in our town, and I was at the
+ rehearsal t'other day; but I did not value it, nor would go to the
+ meeting. Did I tell you this before?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ London, 14. We came to town this day in two hours and forty minutes:
+ twenty miles are nothing here. I found a letter from the Archbishop of
+ Dublin, sent me the Lord knows how. He says some of the bishops will
+ hardly believe that Lord Treasurer got the Queen to remit the First-Fruits
+ before the Duke of Ormond was declared Lord Lieutenant, and that the
+ bishops have written a letter to Lord Treasurer to thank him. He has sent
+ me the address of the Convocation, ascribing, in good part, that affair to
+ the Duke, who had less share in it than MD; for if it had not been for MD,
+ I should not have been so good a solicitor. I dined to-day in the City,
+ about a little bit of mischief, with a printer.&mdash;I found Mrs.
+ Vanhomrigh all in combustion, squabbling with her rogue of a landlord; she
+ has left her house, and gone out of our neighbourhood a good way. Her
+ eldest daughter is come of age, and going to Ireland to look after her
+ fortune, and get it in her own hands.(9)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. I dined to-day with Mrs. Van, who goes to-night to her new lodgings. I
+ went at six to see Lord Treasurer; but his company was gone, contrary to
+ custom, and he was busy, and I was forced to stay some time before I could
+ see him. We were together hardly an hour, and he went away, being in
+ haste. He desired me to dine with him on Friday, because there would be a
+ friend of his that I must see: my Lord Harley told me, when he was gone,
+ that it was Mrs. Masham his father meant, who is come to town to lie-in,
+ and whom I never saw, though her husband is one of our Society. God send
+ her a good time! her death would be a terrible thing.(10)&mdash;Do you
+ know that I have ventured all my credit with these great Ministers, to
+ clear some misunderstandings betwixt them; and if there be no breach, I
+ ought to have the merit of it. 'Tis a plaguy ticklish piece of work, and a
+ man hazards losing both sides. It is a pity the world does not know my
+ virtue.&mdash;I thought the clergy in Convocation in Ireland would have
+ given me thanks for being their solicitor; but I hear of no such thing.
+ Pray talk occasionally on that subject, and let me know what you hear. Do
+ you know the greatness of my spirit, that I value their thanks not a rush,
+ but at my return shall freely let all people know that it was my Lord
+ Treasurer's action, wherein the Duke of Ormond had no more share than a
+ cat? And so they may go whistle, and I'll go sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. I was this day in the City, and dined at Pontack's(11) with Stratford,
+ and two other merchants. Pontack told us, although his wine was so good,
+ he sold it cheaper than others; he took but seven shillings a flask. Are
+ not these pretty rates? The books he sent for from Hamburg are come, but
+ not yet got out of the custom-house. My library will be at least double
+ when I come back. I shall go to Windsor again on Saturday, to meet our
+ Society, who are to sup at Mr. Secretary's; but I believe I shall return
+ on Monday, and then I will answer your letter, that lies here safe
+ underneath;&mdash;I see it; lie still: I will answer you when the ducks
+ have eaten up the dirt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. I dined to-day at Lord Treasurer's with Mrs. Masham, and she is
+ extremely like one Mrs. Malolly, that was once my landlady in Trim. She
+ was used with mighty kindness and respect, like a favourite. It signifies
+ nothing going to this Lord Treasurer about business, although it be his
+ own. He was in haste, and desires I will come again, and dine with him
+ to-morrow. His famous lying porter is fallen sick, and they think he will
+ die: I wish I had all my half-crowns again. I believe I have told you he
+ is an old Scotch fanatic, and the damn'dest liar in his office alive.(12)
+ I have a mind to recommend Patrick to succeed him: I have trained him up
+ pretty well. I reckon for certain you are now in town. The weather now
+ begins to alter to rain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Windsor, 18. I dined to-day with Lord Treasurer, and he would make me go
+ with him to Windsor, although I was engaged to the Secretary, to whom I
+ made my excuses: we had in the coach besides, his son and son-in-law, Lord
+ Harley and Lord Dupplin, who are two of our Society, and seven of us met
+ by appointment, and supped this night with the Secretary. It was past nine
+ before we got here, but a fine moonshiny night. I shall go back, I
+ believe, on Monday. 'Tis very late.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. The Queen did not stir out to-day, she is in a little fit of the gout.
+ I dined at Mr. Masham's; we had none but our Society members, six in all,
+ and I supped with Lord Treasurer. The Queen has ordered twenty thousand
+ pounds to go on with the building at Blenheim, which has been starved till
+ now, since the change of the Ministry.(13) I suppose it is to reward his
+ last action of getting into the French lines.(14) Lord Treasurer kept me
+ till past twelve.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ London, 20. It rained terribly every step of our journey to-day: I
+ returned with the Secretary after a dinner of cold meat, and went to Mrs.
+ Van's, where I sat the evening. I grow very idle, because I have a great
+ deal of business. Tell me how you passed your time at Wexford; and are not
+ you glad at heart you have got home safe to your lodgings at St. Mary's,
+ pray? And so your friends come to visit you; and Mrs. Walls is much better
+ of her eye; and the Dean is just as he used to be: and what does Walls say
+ of London? 'tis a reasoning coxcomb. And Goody Stoyte, and Hannah what
+ d'ye call her; no, her name an't Hannah, Catherine I mean; they were so
+ glad to see the ladies again! and Mrs. Manley wanted a companion at ombre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21. I writ to-day to the Archbishop of Dublin, and enclosed a long politic
+ paper by itself. You know the bishops are all angry (smoke the wax-candle
+ drop at the bottom of this paper) I have let the world know the
+ First-Fruits were got by Lord Treasurer before the Duke of Ormond was
+ Governor. I told Lord Treasurer all this, and he is very angry; but I
+ pacified him again by telling him they were fools, and knew nothing of
+ what passed here; but thought all was well enough if they complimented the
+ Duke of Ormond. Lord Treasurer gave me t'other day a letter of thanks he
+ received from the bishops of Ireland, signed by seventeen; and says he
+ will write them an answer. The Dean of Carlisle sat with me to-day till
+ three; and I went to dine with Lord Treasurer, who dined abroad, so did
+ the Secretary, and I was left in the suds. 'Twas almost four, and I got to
+ Sir Matthew Dudley, who had half dined. Thornhill, who killed Sir Cholmley
+ Dering,(15) was murdered by two men, on Turnham Green, last Monday night:
+ as they stabbed him, they bid him remember Sir Cholmley Dering. They had
+ quarrelled at Hampton Court, and followed and stabbed him on horseback. We
+ have only a Grub Street paper of it, but I believe it is true. I went
+ myself through Turnham Green the same night, which was yesterday.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22. We have had terrible rains these two or three days. I intended to dine
+ at Lord Treasurer's, but went to see Lady Abercorn, who is come to town,
+ and my lord; and I dined with them, and visited Lord Treasurer this
+ evening. His porter is mending. I sat with my lord about three hours, and
+ am come home early to be busy. Passing by White's Chocolate-house,(16) my
+ brother Masham called me, and told me his wife was brought to bed of a
+ boy, and both very well. (Our Society, you must know, are all brothers.)
+ Dr. Garth told us that Mr. Henley(17) is dead of an apoplexy. His
+ brother-in-law, Earl Poulett, is gone down to the Grange, to take care of
+ his funeral. The Earl of Danby,(18) the Duke of Leeds's eldest grandson, a
+ very hopeful young man of about twenty, is dead at Utrecht of the
+ smallpox.&mdash;I long to know whether you begin to have any good effect
+ by your waters.&mdash;Methinks this letter goes on slowly; 'twill be a
+ fortnight next Saturday since it was begun, and one side not filled. O fie
+ for shame, Presto! Faith, I'm so tosticated to and from Windsor, that I
+ know not what to say; but, faith, I'll go to Windsor again on Saturday, if
+ they ask me, not else. So lose your money again, now you are come home;
+ do, sirrah.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Take your magnifying-glass, Madam Dingley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You shan't read this, sirrah Stella; don't read it for your life, for fear
+ of your dearest eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There's enough for this side; these Ministers hinder me. Pretty, dear,
+ little, naughty, saucy MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Silly, impudent, loggerhead Presto.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23. Dilly and I dined to-day with Lord Abercorn, and had a fine fat haunch
+ of venison, that smelt rarely on one side: and after dinner Dilly won half
+ a crown of me at backgammon at his lodgings, to his great content. It is a
+ scurvy empty town this melancholy season of the year; but I think our
+ weather begins to mend. The roads are as deep as in winter. The grapes are
+ sad things; but the peaches are pretty good, and there are some figs. I
+ sometimes venture to eat one, but always repent it. You say nothing of the
+ box sent half a year ago. I wish you would pay me for Mrs. Walls's tea.
+ Your mother is in the country, I suppose. Pray send me the account of MD,
+ Madam Dingley, as it stands since November,(19) that is to say, for this
+ year (excluding the twenty pounds lent Stella for Wexford), for I cannot
+ look in your letters. I think I ordered that Hawkshaw's interest should be
+ paid to you. When you think proper, I will let Parvisol know you have paid
+ that twenty pounds, or part of it; and so go play with the Dean, and I
+ will answer your letter to-morrow. Good-night, sirrahs, and love Presto,
+ and be good girls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24. I dined to-day with Lord Treasurer, who chid me for not dining with
+ him yesterday, for it seems I did not understand his invitation; and their
+ Club of the Ministry dined together, and expected me. Lord Radnor(20) and
+ I were walking the Mall this evening; and Mr. Secretary met us, and took a
+ turn or two, and then stole away, and we both believed it was to pick up
+ some wench; and to-morrow he will be at the Cabinet with the Queen: so
+ goes the world! Prior has been out of town these two months, nobody knows
+ where, and is lately returned. People confidently affirm he has been in
+ France, and I half believe it. It is said he was sent by the Ministry, and
+ for some overtures towards a peace. The Secretary pretends he knows
+ nothing of it. I believe your Parliament will be dissolved. I have been
+ talking about the quarrel between your Lords and Commons with Lord
+ Treasurer, and did, at the request of some people, desire that the Queen's
+ answer to the Commons' address might express a dislike of some principles,
+ etc.; but was answered dubiously.&mdash;And so now to your letter, fair
+ ladies. I know drinking is bad; I mean writing is bad in drinking the
+ waters; and was angry to see so much in Stella's hand. But why Dingley
+ drinks them, I cannot imagine; but truly she'll drink waters as well as
+ Stella: why not? I hope you now find the benefit of them since you are
+ returned; pray let me know particularly. I am glad you are forced upon
+ exercise, which, I believe, is as good as the waters for the heart of
+ them. 'Tis now past the middle of August; so by your reckoning you are in
+ Dublin. It would vex me to the dogs that letters should miscarry between
+ Dublin and Wexford, after 'scaping the salt seas. I will write no more to
+ that nasty town in haste again, I warrant you. I have been four Sundays
+ together at Windsor, of which a fortnight together; but I believe I shall
+ not go to-morrow, for I will not, unless the Secretary asks me. I know all
+ your news about the Mayor: it makes no noise here at all, but the quarrel
+ of your Parliament does; it is so very extraordinary, and the language of
+ the Commons so very pretty. The Examiner has been down this month, and was
+ very silly the five or six last papers; but there is a pamphlet come out,
+ in answer to a letter to the seven Lords who examined Gregg.(21) The
+ Answer(22) is by the real author of the Examiner, as I believe; for it is
+ very well written. We had Trapp's poem on the Duke of Ormond(23) printed
+ here, and the printer sold just eleven of them. 'Tis a dull piece, not
+ half so good as Stella's; and she is very modest to compare herself with
+ such a poetaster. I am heartily sorry for poor Mrs. Parnell's(24) death;
+ she seemed to be an excellent good-natured young woman, and I believe the
+ poor lad is much afflicted; they appeared to live perfectly well together.
+ Dilly is not tired at all with England, but intends to continue here a
+ good while: he is mighty easy to be at distance from his two
+ sisters-in-law. He finds some sort of scrub acquaintance; goes now and
+ then in disguise to a play; smokes his pipe; reads now and then a little
+ trash, and what else the Lord knows. I see him now and then; for he calls
+ here, and the town being thin, I am less pestered with company than usual.
+ I have got rid of many of my solicitors, by doing nothing for them: I have
+ not above eight or nine left, and I'll be as kind to them. Did I tell you
+ of a knight who desired me to speak to Lord Treasurer to give him two
+ thousand pounds, or five hundred pounds a year, until he could get
+ something better? I honestly delivered my message to the Treasurer,
+ adding, the knight was a puppy, whom I would not give a groat to save from
+ the gallows. Cole Reading's father-in-law has been two or three times at
+ me, to recommend his lights to the Ministry, assuring me that a word of
+ mine would, etc. Did not that dog use to speak ill of me, and profess to
+ hate me? He knows not where I lodge, for I told him I lived in the
+ country; and I have ordered Patrick to deny me constantly to him.&mdash;Did
+ the Bishop of London(25) die in Wexford? poor gentleman! Did he drink the
+ waters? were you at his burial? was it a great funeral? so far from his
+ friends! But he was very old: we shall all follow. And yet it was a pity,
+ if God pleased. He was a good man; not very learned: I believe he died but
+ poor. Did he leave any charity legacies? who held up his pall? was there a
+ great sight of clergy? do they design a tomb for him?&mdash;Are you sure
+ it was the Bishop of London? because there is an elderly gentleman here
+ that we give the same title to: or did you fancy all this in your water,
+ as others do strange things in their wine? They say these waters trouble
+ the head, and make people imagine what never came to pass. Do you make no
+ more of killing a Bishop? are these your Whiggish tricks?&mdash;Yes, yes,
+ I see you are in a fret. O, faith, says you, saucy Presto, I'll break your
+ head; what, can't one report what one hears, without being made a jest and
+ a laughing-stock? Are these your English tricks, with a murrain? And
+ Sacheverell will be the next Bishop? He would be glad of an addition of
+ two hundred pounds a year to what he has, and that is more than they will
+ give him, for aught I see. He hates the new Ministry mortally, and they
+ hate him, and pretend to despise him too. They will not allow him to have
+ been the occasion of the late change; at least some of them will not: but
+ my Lord Keeper owned it to me the other day. No, Mr. Addison does not go
+ to Ireland this year: he pretended he would; but he is gone to Bath with
+ Pastoral Philips, for his eyes.&mdash;So now I have run over your letter;
+ and I think this shall go to-morrow, which will be just a fortnight from
+ the last, and bring things to the old form again, after your rambles to
+ Wexford, and mine to Windsor. Are there not many literal faults in my
+ letters? I never read them over, and I fancy there are. What do you do
+ then? do you guess my meaning, or are you acquainted with my manner of
+ mistaking? I lost my handkerchief in the Mall to-night with Lord Radnor;
+ but I made him walk with me to find it, and find it I did not. Tisdall(26)
+ (that lodges with me) and I have had no conversation, nor do we pull off
+ our hats in the streets. There is a cousin of his (I suppose,) a young
+ parson, that lodges in the house too; a handsome, genteel fellow. Dick
+ Tighe(27) and his wife lodged over against us; and he has been seen, out
+ of our upper windows, beating her two or three times: they are both gone
+ to Ireland, but not together; and he solemnly vows never to live with her.
+ Neighbours do not stick to say that she has a tongue: in short, I am told
+ she is the most urging, provoking devil that ever was born; and he a hot,
+ whiffling(28) puppy, very apt to resent. I'll keep this bottom till
+ to-morrow: I'm sleepy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25. I was with the Secretary this morning, who was in a mighty hurry, and
+ went to Windsor in a chariot with Lord Keeper; so I was not invited, and
+ am forced to stay at home, but not at all against my will; for I could
+ have gone, and would not. I dined in the City with one of my printers, for
+ whom I got the Gazette, and am come home early; and have nothing to say to
+ you more, but finish this letter, and not send it by the bellman. Days
+ grow short, and the weather grows bad, and the town is splenetic, and
+ things are so oddly contrived that I cannot be absent; otherwise I would
+ go for a few days to Oxford, as I promised.&mdash;They say it is certain
+ that Prior has been in France,(29) nobody doubts it: I had not time to ask
+ the Secretary, he was in such haste. Well, I will take my leave of dearest
+ MD for a while; for I must begin my next letter to-night: consider that,
+ young women; and pray be merry, and good girls, and love Presto. There is
+ now but one business the Ministry want me for, and when that is done, I
+ will take my leave of them. I never got a penny from them, nor expect it.
+ In my opinion, some things stand very ticklish; I dare say nothing at this
+ distance. Farewell, dear sirrahs, dearest lives: there is peace and quiet
+ with MD, and nowhere else. They have not leisure here to think of small
+ things, which may ruin them; and I have been forward enough. Farewell
+ again, dearest rogues; I am never happy but when I write or think of MD. I
+ have enough of Courts and Ministries, and wish I were at Laracor; and if I
+ could with honour come away this moment, I would. Bernage(30) came to see
+ me to-day; he is just landed from Portugal, and come to raise recruits; he
+ looks very well, and seems pleased with his station and manner of life. He
+ never saw London nor England before; he is ravished with Kent, which was
+ his first prospect when he landed. Farewell again, etc. etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0032" id="link2H_4_0032">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 29.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, Aug. 25, 1711.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I have got a pretty small gilt sheet of paper, to write to MD. I have this
+ moment sent my 28th by Patrick, who tells me he has put it in the
+ post-office; 'tis directed to your lodgings: if it wants more particular
+ direction, you must set me right. It is now a solar month and two days
+ since the date of your last, N.18; and I reckon you are now quiet at home,
+ and thinking to begin your 19th, which will be full of your quarrel
+ between the two Houses, all which I know already. Where shall I dine
+ to-morrow? can you tell? Mrs. Vanhomrigh boards now, and cannot invite
+ one; and there I used to dine when I was at a loss: and all my friends are
+ gone out of town, and your town is now at the fullest, with your
+ Parliament and Convocation. But let me alone, sirrahs; for Presto is going
+ to be very busy; not Presto, but the other I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26. People have so left the town that I am at a loss for a dinner. It is a
+ long time since I have been at London upon a Sunday; and the Ministers are
+ all at Windsor. It cost me eighteenpence in coach-hire before I could find
+ a place to dine in. I went to Frankland's,(1) and he was abroad, and the
+ drab his wife looked out at window, and bowed to me without inviting me
+ up: so I dined with Mr. Coote,(2) my Lord Mountrath's brother; my lord is
+ with you in Ireland. This morning at five my Lord Jersey(3) died of the
+ gout in his stomach, or apoplexy, or both: he was abroad yesterday, and
+ his death was sudden. He was Chamberlain to King William, and a great
+ favourite, turned out by the Queen as a Tory, and stood now fair to be
+ Privy Seal; and by his death will, I suppose, make that matter easier,
+ which has been a very stubborn business at Court, as I have been informed.
+ I never remember so many people of quality to have died in so short a
+ time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27. I went to-day into the City, to thank Stratford for my books, and dine
+ with him, and settle my affairs of my money in the Bank, and receive a
+ bill for Mrs. Wesley for some things I am to buy for her; and the d&mdash;&mdash;
+ a one of all these could I do. The merchants were all out of town, and I
+ was forced to go to a little hedge place for my dinner. May my enemies
+ live here in summer! and yet I am so unlucky that I cannot possibly be out
+ of the way at this juncture. People leave the town so late in summer, and
+ return so late in winter, that they have almost inverted the seasons. It
+ is autumn this good while in St. James's Park; the limes have been losing
+ their leaves, and those remaining on the trees are all parched: I hate
+ this season, where everything grows worse and worse. The only good thing
+ of it is the fruit, and that I dare not eat. Had you any fruit at Wexford?
+ A few cherries, and durst not eat them. I do not hear we have yet got a
+ new Privy Seal. The Whigs whisper that our new Ministry differ among
+ themselves, and they begin to talk out Mr. Secretary: they have some
+ reasons for their whispers, although I thought it was a greater secret. I
+ do not much like the posture of things; I always apprehended that any
+ falling out would ruin them, and so I have told them several times. The
+ Whigs are mighty full of hopes at present; and whatever is the matter, all
+ kind of stocks fall. I have not yet talked with the Secretary about
+ Prior's journey. I should be apt to think it may foretell a peace, and
+ that is all we have to preserve us. The Secretary is not come from
+ Windsor, but I expect him to-morrow. Burn all politics!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28. We begin to have fine weather, and I walked to-day to Chelsea, and
+ dined with the Dean of Carlisle, who is laid up with the gout. It is now
+ fixed that he is to be Dean of Christ Church in Oxford. I was advising him
+ to use his interest to prevent any misunderstanding between our Ministers;
+ but he is too wise to meddle, though he fears the thing and the
+ consequences as much as I. He will get into his own warm, quiet deanery,
+ and leave them to themselves; and he is in the right.&mdash;When I came
+ home to-night, I found a letter from Mr. Lewis, who is now at Windsor; and
+ in it, forsooth, another which looked like Presto's hand; and what should
+ it be but a 19th from MD? O, faith, I 'scaped narrowly, for I sent my 28th
+ but on Saturday; and what should I have done if I had two letters to
+ answer at once? I did not expect another from Wexford, that is certain.
+ Well, I must be contented; but you are dear saucy girls, for all that, to
+ write so soon again, faith; an't you?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29. I dined to-day with Lord Abercorn, and took my leave of them: they set
+ out to-morrow for Chester, and, I believe, will now fix in Ireland. They
+ have made a pretty good journey of it: his eldest son(4) is married to a
+ lady with ten thousand pounds; and his second son(5) has, t'other day, got
+ a prize in the lottery of four thousand pounds, beside two small ones of
+ two hundred pounds each: nay, the family was so fortunate, that my lord
+ bestowing one ticket, which is a hundred pounds, to one of his servants,
+ who had been his page, the young fellow got a prize, which has made it
+ another hundred. I went in the evening to Lord Treasurer, who desires I
+ will dine with him to-morrow, when he will show me the answer he designs
+ to return to the letter of thanks from your bishops in Ireland. The
+ Archbishop of Dublin desired me to get myself mentioned in the answer
+ which my lord would send; but I sent him word I would not open my lips to
+ my lord upon it. He says it would convince the bishops of what I have
+ affirmed, that the First-Fruits were granted before the Duke of Ormond was
+ declared Governor; and I writ to him that I would not give a farthing to
+ convince them. My Lord Treasurer began a health to my Lord Privy Seal:
+ Prior punned, and said it was so privy, he knew not who it was; but I
+ fancy they have fixed it all, and we shall know to-morrow. But what care
+ you who is Privy Seal, saucy sluttikins?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30. When I went out this morning, I was surprised with the news that the
+ Bishop of Bristol is made Lord Privy Seal. You know his name is
+ Robinson,(6) and that he was many years Envoy in Sweden. All the friends
+ of the present Ministry are extremely glad, and the clergy above the rest.
+ The Whigs will fret to death to see a civil employment given to a
+ clergyman. It was a very handsome thing in my Lord Treasurer, and will
+ bind the Church to him for ever. I dined with him to-day, but he had not
+ written his letter;(see above, 29th Aug.) but told me he would not offer
+ to send it without showing it to me: he thought that would not be just,
+ since I was so deeply concerned in the affair. We had much company: Lord
+ Rivers, Mar,(7) and Kinnoull,(8) Mr. Secretary, George Granville, and
+ Masham: the last has invited me to the christening of his son to-morrow
+ se'ennight; and on Saturday I go to Windsor with Mr. Secretary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 31. Dilly and I walked to-day to Kensington to Lady Mountjoy, who invited
+ us to dinner. He returned soon, to go to a play, it being the last that
+ will be acted for some time: he dresses himself like a beau, and no doubt
+ makes a fine figure. I went to visit some people at Kensington: Ophy
+ Butler's wife(9) there lies very ill of an ague, which is a very common
+ disease here, and little known in Ireland. I am apt to think we shall soon
+ have a peace, by the little words I hear thrown out by the Ministry. I
+ have just thought of a project to bite the town. I have told you that it
+ is now known that Mr. Prior has been lately in France. I will make a
+ printer of my own sit by me one day, and I will dictate to him a formal
+ relation of Prior's journey,(10) with several particulars, all pure
+ invention; and I doubt not but it will take.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sept. 1. Morning. I go to-day to Windsor with Mr. Secretary; and Lord
+ Treasurer has promised to bring me back. The weather has been fine for
+ some time, and I believe we shall have a great deal of dust.&mdash;At
+ night. Windsor. The Secretary and I dined to-day at Parson's Green, at my
+ Lord Peterborow's house, who has left it and his gardens to the Secretary
+ during his absence. It is the finest garden I have ever seen about this
+ town; and abundance of hot walls for grapes, where they are in great
+ plenty, and ripening fast. I durst not eat any fruit but one fig; but I
+ brought a basket full to my friend Lewis here at Windsor. Does Stella
+ never eat any? what, no apricots at Donnybrook! nothing but claret and
+ ombre! I envy people maunching and maunching peaches and grapes, and I not
+ daring to eat a bit. My head is pretty well, only a sudden turn any time
+ makes me giddy for a moment, and sometimes it feels very stuffed; but if
+ it grows no worse, I can bear it very well. I take all opportunities of
+ walking; and we have a delicious park here just joining to the Castle, and
+ an avenue in the great park very wide and two miles long, set with a
+ double row of elms on each side. Were you ever at Windsor? I was once, a
+ great while ago; but had quite forgotten it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. The Queen has the gout, and did not come to chapel, nor stir out from
+ her chamber, but received the sacrament there, as she always does the
+ first Sunday in the month. Yet we had a great Court; and, among others, I
+ saw your Ingoldsby,(11) who, seeing me talk very familiarly with the
+ Keeper, Treasurer, etc., came up and saluted me, and began a very
+ impertinent discourse about the siege of Bouchain. I told him I could not
+ answer his questions, but I would bring him one that should; so I went and
+ fetched Sutton (who brought over the express about a month ago), and
+ delivered him to the General, and bid him answer his questions; and so I
+ left them together. Sutton after some time comes back in a rage, finds me
+ with Lord Rivers and Masham, and there complains of the trick I had played
+ him, and swore he had been plagued to death with Ingoldsby's talk. But he
+ told me Ingoldsby asked him what I meant by bringing him; so, I suppose,
+ he smoked me a little. So we laughed, etc. My Lord Willoughby,(12) who is
+ one of the chaplains, and Prebendary of Windsor, read prayers last night
+ to the family; and the Bishop of Bristol, who is Dean of Windsor,
+ officiated last night at the Cathedral. This they do to be popular; and it
+ pleases mightily. I dined with Mr. Masham, because he lets me have a
+ select company: for the Court here have got by the end a good thing I said
+ to the Secretary some weeks ago. He showed me his bill of fare, to tempt
+ me to dine with him. "Poh," said I, "I value not your bill of fare; give
+ me your bill of company." Lord Treasurer was mightily pleased, and told it
+ everybody as a notable thing. I reckon upon returning to-morrow: they say
+ the Bishop will then have the Privy Seal delivered him at a great Council.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. Windsor still. The Council was held so late to-day that I do not go
+ back to town till to-morrow. The Bishop was sworn Privy Councillor, and
+ had the Privy Seal given him: and now the patents are passed for those who
+ were this long time to be made lords or earls. Lord Raby,(13) who is Earl
+ of Strafford, is on Thursday to marry a namesake of Stella's; the daughter
+ of Sir H. Johnson in the City; he has three-score thousand pounds with
+ her, ready money; besides the rest at the father's death. I have got my
+ friend Stratford to be one of the directors of the South Sea Company, who
+ were named to-day. My Lord Treasurer did it for me a month ago; and one of
+ those whom I got to be printer of the Gazette I am recommending to be
+ printer to the same company. He treated Mr. Lewis and me to-day at dinner.
+ I supped last night and this with Lord Treasurer, Keeper, etc., and took
+ occasion to mention the printer. I said it was the same printer whom my
+ Lord Treasurer has appointed to print for the South Sea Company. He
+ denied, and I insisted on it; and I got the laugh on my side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ London, 4. I came as far as Brentford in Lord Rivers's chariot, who had
+ business with Lord Treasurer; then I went into Lord Treasurer's. We
+ stopped at Kensington, where Lord Treasurer went to see Mrs. Masham, who
+ is now what they call in the straw. We got to town by three, and I lighted
+ at Lord Treasurer's, who commanded me not to stir: but I was not well; and
+ when he went up, I begged the young lord to excuse me, and so went into
+ the City by water, where I could be easier, and dined with the printer,
+ and dictated to him some part of Prior's Journey to France. I walked from
+ the City, for I take all occasions of exercise. Our journey was horridly
+ dusty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. When I went out to-day, I found it had rained mightily in the night,
+ and the streets were as dirty as winter: it is very refreshing after ten
+ days dry.&mdash;I went into the City, and dined with Stratford, thanked
+ him for his books, gave him joy of his being director, of which he had the
+ first notice by a letter from me. I ate sturgeon, and it lies on my
+ stomach. I almost finished Prior's Journey at the printer's; and came home
+ pretty late, with Patrick at my heels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. Morning. But what shall we do about this letter of MD's, N.19? Not a
+ word answered yet, and so much paper spent! I cannot do anything in it,
+ sweethearts, till night.&mdash;At night. O Lord, O Lord! the greatest
+ disgrace that ever was has happened to Presto. What do you think? but,
+ when I was going out this forenoon a letter came from MD, N.20, dated
+ Dublin. O dear, O dear! O sad, O sad!&mdash;Now I have two letters
+ together to answer: here they are, lying together. But I will only answer
+ the first; for I came in late. I dined with my friend Lewis at his
+ lodgings, and walked at six to Kensington to Mrs. Masham's son's
+ christening. It was very private; nobody there but my Lord Treasurer, his
+ son and son-in-law, that is to say, Lord Harley and Lord Dupplin, and Lord
+ Rivers and I. The Dean of Rochester(14) christened the child, but soon
+ went away. Lord Treasurer and Lord Rivers were godfathers; and Mrs.
+ Hill,(15) Mrs. Masham's sister, godmother. The child roared like a bull,
+ and I gave Mrs. Masham joy of it; and she charged me to take care of my
+ nephew, because, Mr. Masham being a brother of our Society, his son, you
+ know, is consequently a nephew. Mrs. Masham sat up dressed in bed, but
+ not, as they do in Ireland, with all smooth about her, as if she was cut
+ off in the middle; for you might see the counterpane (what d'ye call it?)
+ rise about her hips and body. There is another name of the counterpane;
+ and you will laugh now, sirrahs. George Granville came in at supper, and
+ we stayed till eleven; and Lord Treasurer set me down at my lodging in
+ Suffolk Street. Did I ever tell you that Lord Treasurer hears ill with the
+ left ear, just as I do? He always turns the right, and his servants
+ whisper him at that only. I dare not tell him that I am so too, for fear
+ he should think I counterfeited, to make my court.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. You must read this before the other; for I mistook, and forgot to write
+ yesterday's journal, it was so insignificant. I dined with Dr. Cockburn,
+ and sat the evening with Lord Treasurer till ten o'clock. On Thursdays he
+ has always a large select company, and expects me. So good-night for last
+ night, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. Morning. I go to Windsor with Lord Treasurer to-day, and will leave
+ this behind me, to be sent to the post. And now let us hear what says the
+ first letter, N.19. You are still at Wexford, as you say, Madam Dingley. I
+ think no letter from me ever yet miscarried. And so Inish-Corthy,(16) and
+ the river Slainy; fine words those in a lady's mouth. Your hand like
+ Dingley's, you scambling,(17) scattering sluttikin! YES, MIGHTY LIKE
+ INDEED, IS NOT IT?(18) Pisshh, do not talk of writing or reading till your
+ eyes are well, and long well; only I would have Dingley read sometimes to
+ you, that you may not lose the desire of it. God be thanked, that the ugly
+ numbing is gone! Pray use exercise when you go to town. What game is that
+ ombra which Dr. Elwood(19) and you play at? is it the Spanish game ombre?
+ Your card-purse? you a card-purse! you a fiddlestick. You have luck
+ indeed; and luck in a bag. What a devil! is that eight-shilling tea-kettle
+ copper, or tin japanned? It is like your Irish politeness, raffling for
+ tea-kettles. What a splutter you keep, to convince me that Walls has no
+ taste! My head continues pretty well. Why do you write, dear sirrah
+ Stella, when you find your eyes so weak that you cannot see? what comfort
+ is there in reading what you write, when one knows that? So Dingley cannot
+ write, because of the clutter of new company come to Wexford! I suppose
+ the noise of their hundred horses disturbs you; or do you lie in one
+ gallery, as in an hospital? What! you are afraid of losing in Dublin the
+ acquaintance you have got in Wexford, and chiefly the Bishop of
+ Raphoe,(20) an old, doting, perverse coxcomb? Twenty at a time at
+ breakfast. That is like five pounds at a time, when it was never but once.
+ I doubt, Madam Dingley, you are apt to lie in your travels, though not so
+ bad as Stella; she tells thumpers, as I shall prove in my next, if I find
+ this receives encouragement.&mdash;So Dr. Elwood says there are a world of
+ pretty things in my works. A pox on his praises! an enemy here would say
+ more. The Duke of Buckingham would say as much, though he and I are
+ terribly fallen out; and the great men are perpetually inflaming me
+ against him: they bring me all he says of me, and, I believe, make it
+ worse out of roguery.&mdash;No, 'tis not your pen is bewitched, Madam
+ Stella, but your old SCRAWLING, SPLAY-FOOT POT-HOOKS, S, S,(21) ay that's
+ it: there the s, s, s, there, there, that's exact. Farewell, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our fine weather is gone; and I doubt we shall have a rainy journey
+ to-day. Faith, 'tis shaving-day, and I have much to do. When Stella says
+ her pen was bewitched, it was only because there was a hair in it. You
+ know, the fellow they call God-help-it had the same thoughts of his wife,
+ and for the same reason. I think this is very well observed, and I
+ unfolded the letter to tell you it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cut off those two notes above; and see the nine pounds indorsed, and
+ receive the other; and send me word how my accounts stand, that they may
+ be adjusted by Nov. 1.(22) Pray be very particular; but the twenty pounds
+ I lend you is not to be included: so make no blunder. I won't wrong you,
+ nor you shan't wrong me; that is the short. O Lord, how stout Presto is of
+ late! But he loves MD more than his life a thousand times, for all his
+ stoutness; tell them that; and that I'll swear it, as hope saved, ten
+ millions of times, etc. etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I open my letter once more, to tell Stella that if she does not use
+ exercise after her waters, it will lose all the effects of them: I should
+ not live if I did not take all opportunities of walking. Pray, pray, do
+ this, to oblige poor Presto.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0033" id="link2H_4_0033">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 30.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ WINDSOR, Sept. 8, 1711.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I made the coachman stop, and put in my twenty-ninth at the post-office at
+ two o'clock to-day, as I was going to Lord Treasurer, with whom I dined,
+ and came here by a quarter-past eight; but the moon shone, and so we were
+ not in much danger of overturning; which, however, he values not a straw,
+ and only laughs when I chide at him for it. There was nobody but he and I,
+ and we supped together, with Mr. Masham, and Dr. Arbuthnot, the Queen's
+ favourite physician, a Scotchman. I could not keep myself awake after
+ supper, but did all I was able to disguise it, and thought I came off
+ clear; but, at parting, he told me I had got my nap already. It is now one
+ o'clock; but he loves sitting up late.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. The Queen is still in the gout, but recovering: she saw company in her
+ bed-chamber after church; but the crowd was so great, I could not see her.
+ I dined with my brother Sir William Wyndham,(1) and some others of our
+ Society, to avoid the great tables on Sunday at Windsor, which I hate. The
+ usual company supped to-night at Lord Treasurer's, which was Lord Keeper,
+ Mr. Secretary, George Granville, Masham, Arbuthnot, and I. But showers
+ have hindered me from walking to-day, and that I do not love.&mdash;Noble
+ fruit, and I dare not eat a bit. I ate one fig to-day, and sometimes a few
+ mulberries, because it is said they are wholesome, and you know a good
+ name does much. I shall return to town to-morrow, though I thought to have
+ stayed a week, to be at leisure for something I am doing. But I have put
+ it off till next; for I shall come here again on Saturday, when our
+ Society are to meet at supper at Mr. Secretary's. My life is very regular
+ here: on Sunday morning I constantly visit Lord Keeper, and sup at Lord
+ Treasurer's with the same set of company. I was not sleepy to-night; I
+ resolved I would not; yet it is past midnight at this present writing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ London, 10. Lord Treasurer and Masham and I left Windsor at three this
+ afternoon: we dropped Masham at Kensington with his lady, and got home by
+ six. It was seven before we sat down to dinner, and I stayed till past
+ eleven. Patrick came home with the Secretary: I am more plagued with
+ Patrick and my portmantua than with myself. I forgot to tell you that when
+ I went to Windsor on Saturday I overtook Lady Giffard and Mrs. Fenton(2)
+ in a chariot, going, I suppose, to Sheen. I was then in a chariot too, of
+ Lord Treasurer's brother, who had business with the Treasurer; and my lord
+ came after, and overtook me at Turnham Green, four miles from London; and
+ then the brother went back, and I went in the coach with Lord Treasurer:
+ so it happened that those people saw me, and not with Lord Treasurer. Mrs.
+ F. was to see me about a week ago; and desired I would get her son into
+ the Charter-house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. This morning the printer sent me an account of Prior's Journey;(3) it
+ makes a twopenny pamphlet. I suppose you will see it, for I dare engage it
+ will run; 'tis a formal, grave lie, from the beginning to the end. I writ
+ all but about the last page; that I dictated, and the printer writ. Mr.
+ Secretary sent to me to dine where he did; it was at Prior's: when I came
+ in, Prior showed me the pamphlet, seemed to be angry, and said, "Here is
+ our English liberty!" I read some of it, and said I liked it mightily, and
+ envied the rogue the thought; for, had it come into my head, I should have
+ certainly done it myself. We stayed at Prior's till past ten; and then the
+ Secretary received a packet with the news of Bouchain being taken, for
+ which the guns will go off to-morrow. Prior owned his having been in
+ France, for it was past denying: it seems he was discovered by a rascal at
+ Dover, who had positive orders to let him pass. I believe we shall have a
+ peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. It is terrible rainy weather, and has cost me three shillings in
+ coaches and chairs to-day, yet I was dirty into the bargain. I was three
+ hours this morning with the Secretary about some business of moment, and
+ then went into the City to dine. The printer tells me he sold yesterday a
+ thousand of Prior's Journey, and had printed five hundred more. It will do
+ rarely, I believe, and is a pure bite. And what is MD doing all this
+ while? got again to their cards, their Walls, their deans, their Stoytes,
+ and their claret? Pray present my service to Mr. Stoyte and Catherine.
+ Tell Goody Stoyte she owes me a world of dinners, and I will shortly come
+ over and demand them.&mdash;Did I tell you of the Archbishop of Dublin's
+ last letter? He had been saying, in several of his former, that he would
+ shortly write to me something about myself; and it looked as if he
+ intended something for me: at last out it comes, and consists of two
+ parts. First, he advises me to strike in for some preferment now I have
+ friends; and secondly, he advises me, since I have parts, and learning,
+ and a happy pen, to think of some new subject in divinity not handled by
+ others, which I should manage better than anybody. A rare spark this, with
+ a pox! but I shall answer him as rarely. Methinks he should have invited
+ me over, and given me some hopes or promises. But hang him! and so
+ good-night, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. It rained most furiously all this morning till about twelve, and
+ sometimes thundered; I trembled for my shillings, but it cleared up, and I
+ made a shift to get a walk in the Park, and then went with the Secretary
+ to dine with Lord Treasurer. Upon Thursdays there is always a select
+ company: we had the Duke of Shrewsbury, Lord Rivers, the two Secretaries,
+ Mr. Granville, and Mr. Prior. Half of them went to Council at six; but
+ Rivers, Granville, Prior, and I, stayed till eight. Prior was often
+ affecting to be angry at the account of his journey to Paris; and indeed
+ the two last pages, which the printer got somebody to add,(4) are so
+ romantic, they spoil all the rest. Dilly Ashe pretended to me that he was
+ only going to Oxford and Cambridge for a fortnight, and then would come
+ back. I could not see him as I appointed t'other day; but some of his
+ friends tell me he took leave of them as going to Ireland; and so they say
+ at his lodging. I believe the rogue was ashamed to tell me so, because I
+ advised him to stay the winter, and he said he would. I find he had got
+ into a good set of scrub acquaintance, and I thought passed his time very
+ merrily; but I suppose he languished after Balderig, and the claret of
+ Dublin; and, after all, I think he is in the right; for he can eat, drink,
+ and converse better there than here. Bernage was with me this morning: he
+ calls now and then; he is in terrible fear of a peace. He said he never
+ had his health so well as in Portugal. He is a favourite of his Colonel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. I was mortified enough to-day, not knowing where in the world to dine,
+ the town is so empty. I met H. Coote,(5) and thought he would invite me,
+ but he did not: Sir John Stanley did not come into my head; so I took up
+ with Mrs. Van, and dined with her and her damned landlady, who, I believe,
+ by her eyebrows, is a bawd. This evening I met Addison and Pastoral
+ Philips in the Park, and supped with them at Addison's lodgings: we were
+ very good company, and I yet know no man half so agreeable to me as he is.
+ I sat with them till twelve, so you may think it is late, young women;
+ however, I would have some little conversation with MD before your Presto
+ goes to bed, because it makes me sleep, and dream, and so forth. Faith,
+ this letter goes on slowly enough, sirrahs; but I cannot write much at a
+ time till you are quite settled after your journey, you know, and have
+ gone all your visits, and lost your money at ombre. You never play at
+ chess now, Stella. That puts me in mind of Dick Tighe; I fancy I told you
+ he used to beat his wife here; and she deserved it; and he resolves to
+ part with her; and they went to Ireland in different coaches. O Lord, I
+ said all this before, I am sure. Go to bed, sirrahs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Windsor, 15. I made the Secretary stop at Brentford, because we set out at
+ two this afternoon, and fasting would not agree with me. I only designed
+ to eat a bit of bread-and-butter; but he would light, and we ate roast
+ beef like dragons. And he made me treat him and two more gentlemen; faith,
+ it cost me a guinea. I do not like such jesting, yet I was mightily
+ pleased with it too. To-night our Society met at the Secretary's: there
+ were nine of us; and we have chosen a new member, the Earl of Jersey,(6)
+ whose father died lately. 'Tis past one, and I have stolen away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. I design to stay here this week by myself, about some business that
+ lies on my hands, and will take up a great deal of time. Dr. Adams,(7) one
+ of the canons, invited me to-day to dinner. The tables are so full here on
+ Sunday that it is hard to dine with a few, and Dr. Adams knows I love to
+ do so; which is very obliging. The Queen saw company in her bed-chamber;
+ she looks very well, but she sat down. I supped with Lord Treasurer as
+ usual, and stayed till past one as usual, and with our usual company,
+ except Lord Keeper, who did not come this time to Windsor. I hate these
+ suppers mortally, but I seldom eat anything.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. Lord Treasurer and Mr. Secretary stay here till tomorrow; some
+ business keeps them, and I am sorry for it, for they hinder me a day. Mr.
+ Lewis and I were going to dine soberly with a little Court friend at one.
+ But Lord Harley and Lord Dupplin kept me by force, and said we should dine
+ at Lord Treasurer's, who intended to go at four to London. I stayed like a
+ fool, and went with the two young lords to Lord Treasurer, who very fairly
+ turned us all three out of doors. They both were invited to the Duke of
+ Somerset, but he was gone to a horse-race, and would not come till five;
+ so we were forced to go to a tavern, and sent for wine from Lord
+ Treasurer's, who at last, we were told, did not go to town till the
+ morrow, and at Lord Treasurer's we supped again; and I desired him to let
+ me add four shillings to the bill I gave him. We sat up till two, yet I
+ must write to little MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. They are all gone early this morning, and I am alone to seek my
+ fortune; but Dr. Arbuthnot engages me for my dinners; and he yesterday
+ gave me my choice of place, person, and victuals for to-day. So I chose to
+ dine with Mrs. Hill, who is one of the dressers, and Mrs. Masham's sister,
+ no company but us three, and to have a shoulder of mutton, a small one;
+ which was exactly, only there was too much victuals besides; and the
+ Doctor's wife(8) was of the company. And to-morrow Mrs. Hill and I are to
+ dine with the Doctor. I have seen a fellow often about Court whom I
+ thought I knew. I asked who he was, and they told me it was the gentleman
+ porter; then I called him to mind; he was Killy's acquaintance (I won't
+ say yours); I think his name is Lovet,(9) or Lovel, or something like it.
+ I believe he does not know me, and in my present posture I shall not be
+ fond of renewing old acquaintance; I believe I used to see him with the
+ Bradleys; and, by the way, I have not seen Mrs. Bradley since I came to
+ England. I left your letter in London, like a fool; and cannot answer it
+ till I go back, which will not be until Monday next; so this will be above
+ a fortnight from my last; but I will fetch it up in my next; so go and
+ walk to the Dean's for your health this fine weather.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. The Queen designs to have cards and dancing here next week, which
+ makes us think she will stay here longer than we believed. Mrs. Masham is
+ not well after her lying-in: I doubt she got some cold; she is lame in one
+ of her legs with a rheumatic pain. Dr. Arbuthnot and Mrs. Hill go tomorrow
+ to Kensington to see her, and return the same night. Mrs. Hill and I dined
+ with the Doctor to-day. I rode out this morning with the Doctor to see
+ Cranburn, a house of Lord Ranelagh's,(10) and the Duchess of Marlborough's
+ lodge, and the Park; the finest places they are, for nature and
+ plantations, that ever I saw; and the finest riding upon artificial roads,
+ made on purpose for the Queen. Arbuthnot made me draw up a sham
+ subscription for a book, called A History of the Maids of Honour since
+ Harry the Eighth, showing they make the best wives, with a list of all the
+ maids of honour since, etc.; to pay a crown in hand, and the other crown
+ upon delivery of the book; and all in common forms of those things. We got
+ a gentleman to write it fair, because my hand is known; and we sent it to
+ the maids of honour, when they came to supper. If they bite at it, it will
+ be a very good Court jest; and the Queen will certainly have it: we did
+ not tell Mrs. Hill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. To-day I was invited to the Green Cloth by Colonel Godfrey, who
+ married the Duke of Marlborough's sister,(11) mother to the Duke of
+ Berwick by King James: I must tell you those things that happened before
+ you were born. But I made my excuses, and young Harcourt (Lord Keeper's
+ son) and I dined with my next neighbour, Dr Adams.(12) Mrs. Masham is
+ better, and will be here in three or four days. She had need; for the
+ Duchess of Somerset is thought to gain ground daily.&mdash;We have not
+ sent you over all your bills; and I think we have altered your money-bill.
+ The Duke of Ormond is censured here, by those in power, for very wrong
+ management in the affair of the mayoralty.(13) He is governed by fools,
+ and has usually much more sense than his advisers, but never proceeds by
+ it. I must know how your health continues after Wexford. Walk and use
+ exercise, sirrahs both; and get somebody to play at shuttlecock with you,
+ Madam Stella, and walk to the Dean's and Donnybrook.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21. Colonel Godfrey sent to me again to-day; so I dined at the Green
+ Cloth, and we had but eleven at dinner, which is a small number there, the
+ Court being always thin of company till Saturday night.&mdash;This new ink
+ and pen make a strange figure; I MUST WRITE LARGER, YES I MUST, OR STELLA
+ WILL NOT BE ABLE TO READ THIS.(14) S. S. S., there is your S's for you,
+ Stella. The maids of honour are bit, and have all contributed their
+ crowns, and are teasing others to subscribe for the book. I will tell Lord
+ Keeper and Lord Treasurer to-morrow; and I believe the Queen will have it.
+ After a little walk this evening, I squandered away the rest of it in
+ sitting at Lewis's lodging, while he and Dr. Arbuthnot played at picquet.
+ I have that foolish pleasure, which I believe nobody has beside me, except
+ old Lady Berkeley.(15) But I fretted when I came away: I will loiter so no
+ more, for I have a plaguy deal of business upon my hands, and very little
+ time to do it. The pamphleteers begin to be very busy against the
+ Ministry: I have begged Mr. Secretary to make examples of one or two of
+ them, and he assures me he will. They are very bold and abusive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22. This being the day the Ministry come to Windsor, I ate a bit or two at
+ Mr. Lewis's lodgings, because I must sup with Lord Treasurer; and at half
+ an hour after one, I led Mr. Lewis a walk up the avenue, which is two
+ miles long. We walked in all about five miles; but I was so tired with his
+ slow walking, that I left him here, and walked two miles towards London,
+ hoping to meet Lord Treasurer, and return with him; but it grew darkish,
+ and I was forced to walk back, so I walked nine miles in all; and Lord
+ Treasurer did not come till after eight; which is very wrong, for there
+ was no moon, and I often tell him how ill he does to expose himself so;
+ but he only makes a jest of it. I supped with him, and stayed till now,
+ when it is half an hour after two. He is as merry and careless and
+ disengaged as a young heir at one-and-twenty. 'Tis late indeed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23. The Secretary did not come last night, but at three this afternoon. I
+ have not seen him yet, but I verily think they are contriving a peace as
+ fast as they can, without which it will be impossible to subsist. The
+ Queen was at church to-day, but was carried in a chair. I and Mr. Lewis
+ dined privately with Mr. Lowman,(16) Clerk of the Kitchen. I was to see
+ Lord Keeper this morning, and told him the jest of the maids of honour;
+ and Lord Treasurer had it last night. That rogue Arbuthnot puts it all
+ upon me. The Court was very full to-day. I expected Lord Treasurer would
+ have invited me to supper; but he only bowed to me; and we had no
+ discourse in the drawing-room. It is now seven at night, and I am at home;
+ and I hope Lord Treasurer will not send for me to supper: if he does not,
+ I will reproach him; and he will pretend to chide me for not coming.&mdash;So
+ farewell till I go to bed, for I am going to be busy.&mdash;It is now past
+ ten, and I went down to ask the servants about Mr. Secretary: they tell me
+ the Queen is yet at Council, and that she went to supper, and came out to
+ the Council afterwards. It is certain they are managing a peace. I will go
+ to bed, and there is an end.&mdash;It is now eleven, and a messenger is
+ come from Lord Treasurer to sup with them; but I have excused myself, and
+ am glad I am in bed; for else I should sit up till two, and drink till I
+ was hot. Now I'll go sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ London, 24. I came to town by six with Lord Treasurer, and have stayed
+ till ten. That of the Queen's going out to sup, and coming in again, is a
+ lie, as the Secretary told me this morning; but I find the Ministry are
+ very busy with Mr. Prior, and I believe he will go again to France. I am
+ told so much, that we shall certainly have a peace very soon. I had
+ charming weather all last week at Windsor; but we have had a little rain
+ to-day, and yesterday was windy. Prior's Journey sells still; they have
+ sold two thousand, although the town is empty. I found a letter from Mrs.
+ Fenton here, desiring me, in Lady Giffard's name, to come and pass a week
+ at Sheen, while she is at Moor Park. I will answer it with a vengeance:
+ and now you talk of answering, there is MD's N.20 is yet to be answered: I
+ had put it up so safe, I could hardly find it; but here it is, faith, and
+ I am afraid I cannot send this till Thursday; for I must see the Secretary
+ to-morrow morning, and be in some other place in the evening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25. Stella writes like an emperor, and gives such an account of her
+ journey, never saw the like. Let me see; stand away, let us compute; you
+ stayed four days at Inish-Corthy, two nights at Mrs. Proby's mother's, and
+ yet was but six days in journey; for your words are, "We left Wexford this
+ day se'ennight, and came here last night." I have heard them say that
+ "travellers may lie by authority." Make up this, if you can. How far is it
+ from Wexford to Dublin? how many miles did you travel in a day?(17) Let me
+ see&mdash;thirty pounds in two months is nine score pounds a year; a
+ matter of nothing in Stella's purse! I dreamed Billy Swift was alive, and
+ that I told him you writ me word he was dead, and that you had been at his
+ funeral; and I admired at your impudence, and was in mighty haste to run
+ and let you know what lying rogues you were. Poor lad! he is dead of his
+ mother's former folly and fondness; and yet now I believe, as you say,
+ that her grief will soon wear off.&mdash;O yes, Madam Dingley, mightily
+ tired of the company, no doubt of it, at Wexford! And your description of
+ it is excellent; clean sheets, but bare walls; I suppose then you lay upon
+ the walls.&mdash;Mrs. Walls has got her tea; but who pays me the money?
+ Come, I shall never get it; so I make a present of it, to stop some gaps,
+ etc. Where's the thanks of the house? So, that's well; why, it cost
+ four-and-thirty shillings English&mdash;you must adjust that with Mrs.
+ Walls; I think that is so many pence more with you.&mdash;No, Leigh and
+ Sterne, I suppose, were not at the water-side: I fear Sterne's business
+ will not be done; I have not seen him this good while. I hate him, for the
+ management of that box; and I was the greatest fool in nature for trusting
+ to such a young jackanapes; I will speak to him once more about it, when I
+ see him. Mr. Addison and I met once more since, and I supped with him; I
+ believe I told you so somewhere in this letter. The Archbishop chose an
+ admirable messenger in Walls, to send to me; yet I think him fitter for a
+ messenger than anything.&mdash;The D&mdash;&mdash; she has! I did not
+ observe her looks. Will she rot out of modesty with Lady Giffard? I pity
+ poor Jenny(18)&mdash;but her husband is a dunce, and with respect to him
+ she loses little by her deafness. I believe, Madam Stella, in your
+ accounts you mistook one liquor for another, and it was an hundred and
+ forty quarts of wine, and thirty-two of water.&mdash;This is all written
+ in the morning before I go to the Secretary, as I am now doing. I have
+ answered your letter a little shorter than ordinary; but I have a mind it
+ should go to-day, and I will give you my journal at night in my next; for
+ I'm so afraid of another letter before this goes: I will never have two
+ together again unanswered.&mdash;What care I for Dr. Tisdall and Dr.
+ Raymond, or how many children they have! I wish they had a hundred apiece.&mdash;Lord
+ Treasurer promises me to answer the bishops' letter to-morrow, and show it
+ me; and I believe it will confirm all I said, and mortify those that threw
+ the merit on the Duke of Ormond; for I have made him jealous of it; and
+ t'other day, talking of the matter, he said, "I am your witness, you got
+ it for them before the Duke was Lord Lieutenant." My humble service to
+ Mrs. Walls, Mrs. Stoyte, and Catherine. Farewell, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What do you do when you see any literal mistakes in my letters? how do you
+ set them right? for I never read them over to correct them. Farewell,
+ again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pray send this note to Mrs. Brent, to get the money when Parvisol comes to
+ town, or she can send to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0034" id="link2H_4_0034">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 31.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, Sept. 25, 1711.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I dined in the City to-day, and at my return I put my 30th into the
+ post-office; and when I got home I found for me one of the noblest letters
+ I ever read: it was from &mdash;&mdash;, three sides and a half in folio,
+ on a large sheet of paper; the two first pages made up of satire upon
+ London, and crowds and hurry, stolen from some of his own schoolboy's
+ exercises: the side and a half remaining is spent in desiring me to
+ recommend Mrs. South, your Commissioner's widow,(1) to my Lord Treasurer
+ for a pension. He is the prettiest, discreetest fellow that ever my eyes
+ beheld, or that ever dipped pen into ink. I know not what to say to him. A
+ pox on him, I have too many such customers on this side already. I think I
+ will send him word that I never saw my Lord Treasurer in my life: I am
+ sure I industriously avoided the name of any great person when I saw him,
+ for fear of his reporting it in Ireland. And this recommendation must be a
+ secret too, for fear the Duke of Bolton(2) should know it, and think it
+ was too mean. I never read so d&mdash;&mdash;d a letter in my life: a
+ little would make me send it over to you.&mdash;I must send you a pattern,
+ the first place I cast my eyes on, I will not pick and choose. IN THIS
+ PLACE (meaning the Exchange in London), WHICH IS THE COMPENDIUM OF OLD
+ TROYNOVANT, AS THAT IS OF THE WHOLE BUSY WORLD, I GOT SUCH A SURFEIT, THAT
+ I GREW SICK OF MANKIND, AND RESOLVED FOR EVER AFTER TO BURY MYSELF IN THE
+ SHADY RETREAT OF &mdash;&mdash;-. You must know that London has been
+ called by some Troynovant, or New Troy. Will you have any more? Yes, one
+ little bit for Stella, because she'll be fond of it. This wondrous theatre
+ (meaning London) was no more to me than a desert, and I should less
+ complain of solitude in a Connaught shipwreck, or even the great bog of
+ Allen. A little scrap for Mrs. Marget,(3) and then I have done. THEIR
+ ROYAL FANUM, WHEREIN THE IDOL PECUNIA IS DAILY WORSHIPPED, SEEMED TO ME TO
+ BE JUST LIKE A HIVE OF BEES WORKING AND LABOURING UNDER HUGE WEIGHTS OF
+ CARES. Fanum is a temple, but he means the Exchange; and Pecunia is money:
+ so now Mrs. Marget will understand her part. One more paragraph, and I&mdash;
+ Well, come, don't be in such a rage, you shall have no more. Pray, Stella,
+ be satisfied; 'tis very pretty: and that I must be acquainted with such a
+ dog as this!&mdash;Our peace goes on fast. Prior was with the Secretary
+ two hours this morning: I was there a little after he went away, and was
+ told it. I believe he will soon be despatched again to France; and I will
+ put somebody to write an account of his second journey: I hope you have
+ seen the other. This latter has taken up my time with storming at it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26. Bernage has been with me these two days; yesterday I sent for him to
+ let him know that Dr. Arbuthnot is putting in strongly to have his brother
+ made a captain over Bernage's(4) head. Arbuthnot's brother is but an
+ ensign, but the Doctor has great power with the Queen: yet he told me he
+ would not do anything hard to a gentleman who is my friend; and I have
+ engaged the Secretary and his Colonel(5) for him. To-day he told me very
+ melancholy, that the other had written from Windsor (where he went to
+ solicit) that he has got the company; and Bernage is full of the spleen. I
+ made the Secretary write yesterday a letter to the Colonel in Bernage's
+ behalf. I hope it will do yet; and I have written to Dr. Arbuthnot to
+ Windsor, not to insist on doing such a hardship. I dined in the City at
+ Pontack's, with Stratford; it cost me seven shillings: he would have
+ treated, but I did not let him. I have removed my money from the Bank to
+ another fund. I desire Parvisol may speak to Hawkshaw to pay in my money
+ when he can, for I will put it in the funds; and, in the meantime, borrow
+ so much of Mr. Secretary, who offers to lend it me. Go to the Dean's,
+ sirrahs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27. Bernage was with me again to-day, and is in great fear, and so was I;
+ but this afternoon, at Lord Treasurer's, where I dined, my brother, George
+ Granville, Secretary at War, after keeping me a while in suspense, told me
+ that Dr. Arbuthnot had waived the business, because he would not wrong a
+ friend of mine; that his brother is to be a lieutenant, and Bernage is
+ made a captain. I called at his lodging, and the soldier's coffee-house,
+ to put him out of pain, but cannot find him; so I have left word, and
+ shall see him to-morrow morning, I suppose. Bernage is now easy; he has
+ ten shillings a day, beside lawful cheating. However, he gives a private
+ sum to his Colonel, but it is very cheap: his Colonel loves him well, but
+ is surprised to see him have so many friends. So he is now quite off my
+ hands. I left the company early to-night, at Lord Treasurer's; but the
+ Secretary followed me, to desire I would go with him to W&mdash;. Mr.
+ Lewis's man came in before I could finish that word beginning with a W,
+ which ought to be Windsor, and brought me a very handsome rallying letter
+ from Dr. Arbuthnot, to tell me he had, in compliance to me, given up his
+ brother's pretensions in favour of Bernage, this very morning; that the
+ Queen had spoken to Mr. Granville to make the company easy in the other's
+ having the captainship. Whether they have done it to oblige me or no, I
+ must own it so. He says he this very morning begged Her Majesty to give
+ Mr. Bernage the company. I am mighty well pleased to have succeeded so
+ well; but you will think me tedious, although you like the man, as I
+ think.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Windsor, 28. I came here a day sooner than ordinary, at Mr. Secretary's
+ desire, and supped with him and Prior, and two private Ministers from
+ France, and a French priest.(6) I know not the two Ministers' names; but
+ they are come about the peace. The names the Secretary called them, I
+ suppose, were feigned; they were good rational men. We have already
+ settled all things with France, and very much to the honour and advantage
+ of England; and the Queen is in mighty good humour. All this news is a
+ mighty secret; the people in general know that a peace is forwarding. The
+ Earl of Strafford(7) is to go soon to Holland, and let them know what we
+ have been doing: and then there will be the devil and all to pay; but
+ we'll make them swallow it with a pox. The French Ministers stayed with us
+ till one, and the Secretary and I sat up talking till two; so you will own
+ 'tis late, sirrahs, and time for your little saucy Presto to go to bed and
+ sleep adazy; and God bless poor little MD: I hope they are now fast
+ asleep, and dreaming of Presto.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29. Lord Treasurer came to-night, as usual, at half an hour after eight,
+ as dark as pitch. I am weary of chiding him; so I commended him for
+ observing his friend's advice, and coming so early, etc. I was two hours
+ with Lady Oglethorpe(8) to-night, and then supped with Lord Treasurer,
+ after dining at the Green Cloth: I stayed till two; this is the effect of
+ Lord Treasurer's being here; I must sup with him; and he keeps cursed
+ hours. Lord Keeper and the Secretary were absent; they cannot sit up with
+ him. This long sitting up makes the periods in my letters so short. I
+ design to stay here all the next week, to be at leisure by myself, to
+ finish something of weight I have upon my hands, and which must soon be
+ done. I shall then think of returning to Ireland, if these people will let
+ me; and I know nothing else they have for me to do. I gave Dr. Arbuthnot
+ my thanks for his kindness to Bernage, whose commission is now signed.
+ Methinks I long to know something of Stella's health, how it continues
+ after Wexford waters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30. The Queen was not at chapel to-day, and all for the better, for we had
+ a dunce to preach: she has a little of the gout. I dined with my brother
+ Masham, and a moderate company, and would not go to Lord Treasurer's till
+ after supper at eleven o'clock, and pretended I had mistaken the hour; so
+ I ate nothing: and a little after twelve the company broke up, the Keeper
+ and Secretary refusing to stay; so I saved this night's debauch. Prior
+ went away yesterday with his Frenchmen, and a thousand reports are raised
+ in this town. Some said they knew one to be the Abbe de Polignac: others
+ swore it was the Abbe du Bois. The Whigs are in a rage about the peace;
+ but we'll wherret(9) them, I warrant, boys. Go, go, go to the Dean's and
+ don't mind politics, young women, they are not good after the waters; they
+ are stark naught: they strike up into the head. Go, get two black aces,
+ and fish for a manilio.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oct. 1. Sir John Walter,(10) an honest drunken fellow, is now in waiting,
+ and invited me to the Green Cloth to-day, that he might not be behindhand
+ with Colonel Godfrey, who is a Whig. I was engaged to the Mayor's feast
+ with Mr. Masham; but waiting to take leave of Lord Treasurer, I came too
+ late, and so returned sneaking to the Green Cloth, and did not see my Lord
+ Treasurer neither; but was resolved not to lose two dinners for him. I
+ took leave to-day of my friend and solicitor Lord Rivers, who is commanded
+ by the Queen to set out for Hanover on Thursday. The Secretary does not go
+ to town till to-morrow; he and I, and two friends more, drank a sober
+ bottle of wine here at home, and parted at twelve; he goes by seven
+ to-morrow morning, so I shall not see him. I have power over his cellar in
+ his absence, and make little use of it. Lord Dartmouth and my friend Lewis
+ stay here this week; but I can never work out a dinner from Dartmouth.
+ Masham has promised to provide for me: I squired his lady out of her
+ chaise to-day, and must visit her in a day or two. So you have had a long
+ fit of the finest weather in the world; but I am every day in pain that it
+ will go off. I have done no business to-day; I am very idle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. My friend Lewis and I, to avoid over much eating and great tables,
+ dined with honest Jemmy Eckershall,(11) Clerk of the Kitchen, now in
+ waiting, and I bespoke my dinner: but the cur had your acquaintance Lovet,
+ the gentleman porter, to be our company. Lovet, towards the end of dinner,
+ after twenty wrigglings, said he had the honour to see me formerly at Moor
+ Park, and thought he remembered my face. I said I thought I remembered
+ him, and was glad to see him, etc., and I escaped for that much, for he
+ was very pert. It has rained all this day, and I doubt our good weather is
+ gone. I have been very idle this afternoon, playing at twelvepenny picquet
+ with Lewis: I won seven shillings, which is the only money I won this
+ year: I have not played above four times, and I think always at Windsor.
+ Cards are very dear: there is a duty on them of sixpence a pack, which
+ spoils small gamesters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. Mr. Masham sent this morning to desire I would ride out with him, the
+ weather growing again very fine. I was very busy, and sent my excuses; but
+ desired he would provide me a dinner. I dined with him, his lady, and her
+ sister, Mrs. Hill, who invites us to-morrow to dine with her, and we are
+ to ride out in the morning. I sat with Lady Oglethorpe till eight this
+ evening, then was going home to write; looked about for the woman that
+ keeps the key of the house: she told me Patrick had it. I cooled my heels
+ in the cloisters till nine, then went in to the music-meeting, where I had
+ been often desired to go; but was weary in half an hour of their fine
+ stuff, and stole out so privately that everybody saw me; and cooled my
+ heels in the cloisters again till after ten: then came in Patrick. I went
+ up, shut the chamber door, and gave him two or three swinging cuffs on the
+ ear, and I have strained the thumb of my left hand with pulling him, which
+ I did not feel until he was gone. He was plaguily afraid and humbled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. It was the finest day in the world, and we got out before eleven, a
+ noble caravan of us. The Duchess of Shrewsbury in her own chaise with one
+ horse, and Miss Touchet(12) with her, Mrs. Masham and Mrs. Scarborow, one
+ of the dressers, in one of the Queen's chaises; Miss Forester and Miss
+ Scarborow,(13) two maids of honour, and Mrs. Hill on horseback. The Duke
+ of Shrewsbury, Mr. Masham, George Fielding,(14) Arbuthnot, and I, on
+ horseback too. Mrs. Hill's horse was hired for Miss Scarborow, but she
+ took it in civility; her own horse was galled and could not be rid, but
+ kicked and winced: the hired horse was not worth eighteenpence. I borrowed
+ coat, boots, and horse, and in short we had all the difficulties, and more
+ than we used to have in making a party from Trim to Longfield's.(15) My
+ coat was light camlet, faced with red velvet, and silver buttons. We rode
+ in the great park and the forest about a dozen miles, and the Duchess and
+ I had much conversation: we got home by two, and Mr. Masham, his lady,
+ Arbuthnot and I, dined with Mrs. Hill. Arbuthnot made us all melancholy,
+ by some symptoms of bloody u&mdash;-e: he expects a cruel fit of the stone
+ in twelve hours; he says he is never mistaken, and he appears like a man
+ that was to be racked to-morrow. I cannot but hope it will not be so bad;
+ he is a perfectly honest man, and one I have much obligation to. It rained
+ a little this afternoon, and grew fair again. Lady Oglethorpe sent to
+ speak to me, and it was to let me know that Lady Rochester(16) desires she
+ and I may be better acquainted. 'Tis a little too late; for I am not now
+ in love with Lady Rochester: they shame me out of her, because she is old.
+ Arbuthnot says he hopes my strained thumb is not the gout; for he has
+ often found people so mistaken. I do not remember the particular thing
+ that gave it me, only I had it just after beating Patrick, and now it is
+ better; so I believe he is mistaken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. The Duchess of Shrewsbury sent to invite me to dinner; but I was abroad
+ last night when her servant came, and this morning I sent my excuses,
+ because I was engaged, which I was sorry for. Mrs. Forester taxed me
+ yesterday about the History of the Maids of Honour;(17) but I told her
+ fairly it was no jest of mine; for I found they did not relish it
+ altogether well; and I have enough already of a quarrel with that brute
+ Sir John Walter, who has been railing at me in all companies ever since I
+ dined with him; that I abused the Queen's meat and drink, and said nothing
+ at the table was good, and all a d&mdash;&mdash;d lie; for after dinner,
+ commending the wine, I said I thought it was something small. You would
+ wonder how all my friends laugh at this quarrel. It will be such a jest
+ for the Keeper, Treasurer, and Secretary.&mdash;I dined with honest
+ Colonel Godfrey, took a good walk of an hour on the terrace, and then came
+ up to study; but it grows bloody cold, and I have no waistcoat here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. I never dined with the chaplains till to-day; but my friend Gastrell
+ and the Dean of Rochester(18) had often invited me, and I happened to be
+ disengaged: it is the worst provided table at Court. We ate on pewter:
+ every chaplain, when he is made a dean, gives a piece of plate, and so
+ they have got a little, some of it very old. One who was made Dean of
+ Peterborough (a small deanery) said he would give no plate; he was only
+ Dean of Pewterborough. The news of Mr. Hill's miscarriage in his
+ expedition(19) came to-day, and I went to visit Mrs. Masham and Mrs. Hill,
+ his two sisters, to condole with them. I advised them by all means to go
+ to the music-meeting to-night, to show they were not cast down, etc., and
+ they thought my advice was right, and went. I doubt Mr. Hill and his
+ admiral made wrong steps; however, we lay it all to a storm, etc. I sat
+ with the Secretary at supper; then we both went to Lord Treasurer's
+ supper, and sat till twelve. The Secretary is much mortified about Hill,
+ because this expedition was of his contriving, and he counted much upon
+ it; but Lord Treasurer was just as merry as usual, and old laughing at Sir
+ John Walter and me falling out. I said nothing grieved me but that they
+ would take example, and perhaps presume upon it, and get out of my
+ government; but that I thought I was not obliged to govern bears, though I
+ governed men. They promise to be as obedient as ever, and so we laughed;
+ and so I go to bed; for it is colder still, and you have a fire now, and
+ are at cards at home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. Lord Harley and I dined privately to-day with Mrs. Masham and Mrs.
+ Hill, and my brother Masham. I saw Lord Halifax at Court, and we joined
+ and talked; and the Duchess of Shrewsbury came up and reproached me for
+ not dining with her. I said that was not so soon done, for I expected more
+ advances from ladies, especially duchesses: she promised to comply with
+ any demands I pleased; and I agreed to dine with her to-morrow, if I did
+ not go to London too soon, as I believe I shall before dinner. Lady
+ Oglethorpe brought me and the Duchess of Hamilton(20) together to-day in
+ the drawing-room, and I have given her some encouragement, but not much.
+ Everybody has been teasing Walter. He told Lord Treasurer that he took his
+ company from him that were to dine with him: my lord said, "I will send
+ you Dr. Swift:" Lord Keeper bid him take care what he did; "for," said he,
+ "Dr. Swift is not only all our favourite, but our governor." The old
+ company supped with Lord Treasurer, and got away by twelve.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ London, 8. I believe I shall go no more to Windsor, for we expect the
+ Queen will come in ten days to Hampton Court. It was frost last night, and
+ cruel cold to-day. I could not dine with the Duchess, for I left Windsor
+ half an hour after one with Lord Treasurer, and we called at Kensington,
+ where Mrs. Masham was got to see her children for two days. I dined, or
+ rather supped, with Lord Treasurer, and stayed till after ten. Tisdall(21)
+ and his family are gone from hence, upon some wrangle with the family.
+ Yesterday I had two letters brought me to Mr. Masham's; one from Ford, and
+ t'other from our little MD, N.21. I would not tell you till to-day,
+ because I would not. I won't answer it till the next, because I have
+ slipped two days by being at Windsor, which I must recover here. Well,
+ sirrahs, I must go to sleep. The roads were as dry as at midsummer to-day.
+ This letter shall go to-morrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. Morning. It rains hard this morning. I suppose our fair weather is now
+ at an end. I think I'll put on my waistcoat to-day: shall I? Well, I will
+ then, to please MD. I think of dining at home to-day upon a chop and a
+ pot. The town continues yet very thin. Lord Strafford is gone to Holland,
+ to tell them what we have done here toward a peace. We shall soon hear
+ what the Dutch say, and how they take it. My humble service to Mrs. Walls,
+ Mrs. Stoyte, and Catherine.&mdash;Morrow, dearest sirrahs, and farewell;
+ and God Almighty bless MD, poor little dear MD, for so I mean, and Presto
+ too. I'll write to you again to-night, that is, I'll begin my next letter.
+ Farewell, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This little bit belongs to MD; we must always write on the margin:(22) you
+ are saucy rogues.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0035" id="link2H_4_0035">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 32.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, Oct. 9, 1711.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I was forced to lie down at twelve to-day, and mend my night's sleep: I
+ slept till after two, and then sent for a bit of mutton and pot of ale
+ from the next cook's shop, and had no stomach. I went out at four, and
+ called to see Biddy Floyd, which I had not done these three months: she is
+ something marked, but has recovered her complexion quite, and looks very
+ well. Then I sat the evening with Mrs. Vanhomrigh, and drank coffee, and
+ ate an egg. I likewise took a new lodging to-day, not liking a
+ ground-floor, nor the ill smell, and other circumstances. I lodge, or
+ shall lodge, by Leicester Fields, and pay ten shillings a week; that won't
+ hold out long, faith. I shall lie here but one night more. It rained
+ terribly till one o'clock to-day. I lie, for I shall lie here two nights,
+ till Thursday, and then remove. Did I tell you that my friend Mrs. Barton
+ has a brother(1) drowned, that went on the expedition with Jack Hill? He
+ was a lieutenant-colonel, and a coxcomb; and she keeps her chamber in
+ form, and the servants say she receives no messages.&mdash;Answer MD's
+ letter, Presto, d'ye hear? No, says Presto, I won't yet, I'm busy; you're
+ a saucy rogue. Who talks?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. It cost me two shillings in coach-hire to dine in the City with a
+ printer. I have sent, and caused to be sent, three pamphlets out in a
+ fortnight. I will ply the rogues warm; and whenever anything of theirs
+ makes a noise, it shall have an answer. I have instructed an under
+ spur-leather to write so, that it is taken for mine. A rogue that writes a
+ newspaper, called The Protestant Postboy, has reflected on me in one of
+ his papers; but the Secretary has taken him up, and he shall have a
+ squeeze extraordinary. He says that an ambitious tantivy,(2) missing of
+ his towering hopes of preferment in Ireland, is come over to vent his
+ spleen on the late Ministry, etc. I'll tantivy him with a vengeance. I sat
+ the evening at home, and am very busy, and can hardly find time to write,
+ unless it were to MD. I am in furious haste.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. I dined to-day with Lord Treasurer. Thursdays are now his days when
+ his choice company comes, but we are too much multiplied. George Granville
+ sent his excuses upon being ill; I hear he apprehends the apoplexy, which
+ would grieve me much. Lord Treasurer calls Prior nothing but Monsieur
+ Baudrier, which was the feigned name of the Frenchman that writ his
+ Journey to Paris.(3) They pretend to suspect me, so I talk freely of it,
+ and put them out of their play. Lord Treasurer calls me now Dr. Martin,
+ because martin(4) is a sort of a swallow, and so is a swift. When he and I
+ came last Monday from Windsor, we were reading all the signs on the
+ road.(5) He is a pure trifler; tell the Bishop of Clogher so. I made him
+ make two lines in verse for the Bell and Dragon, and they were rare bad
+ ones. I suppose Dilly is with you by this time: what could his reason be
+ of leaving London, and not owning it? 'Twas plaguy silly. I believe his
+ natural inconstancy made him weary. I think he is the king of inconstancy.
+ I stayed with Lord Treasurer till ten; we had five lords and three
+ commoners. Go to ombre, sirrahs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. Mrs. Vanhomrigh has changed her lodging as well as I. She found she
+ had got with a bawd, and removed. I dined with her to-day; for though she
+ boards, her landlady does not dine with her. I am grown a mighty lover of
+ herrings; but they are much smaller here than with you. In the afternoon I
+ visited an old major-general, and ate six oysters; then sat an hour with
+ Mrs. Colledge,(6) the joiner's daughter that was hanged; it was the joiner
+ was hanged, and not his daughter; with Thompson's wife, a magistrate.
+ There was the famous Mrs. Floyd of Chester, who, I think, is the
+ handsomest woman (except MD) that ever I saw. She told me that twenty
+ people had sent her the verses upon Biddy,(7) as meant to her: and,
+ indeed, in point of handsomeness, she deserves them much better. I will
+ not go to Windsor to-morrow, and so I told the Secretary to-day. I hate
+ the thoughts of Saturday and Sunday suppers with Lord Treasurer. Jack Hill
+ is come home from his unfortunate expedition, and is, I think, now at
+ Windsor: I have not yet seen him. He is privately blamed by his own
+ friends for want of conduct. He called a council of war, and therein it
+ was determined to come back. But they say a general should not do that,
+ because the officers will always give their opinion for returning, since
+ the blame will not lie upon them, but the general. I pity him heartily.
+ Bernage received his commission to-day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. I dined to-day with Colonel Crowe,(8) late Governor of Barbadoes; he
+ is a great acquaintance of your friend Sterne, to whom I trusted the box.
+ Lord Treasurer has refused Sterne's business, and I doubt he is a rake;
+ Jemmy Leigh stays for him, and nobody knows where to find him. I am so
+ busy now I have hardly time to spare to write to our little MD, but in a
+ fortnight I hope it will be over. I am going now to be busy, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. I was going to dine with Dr. Cockburn, but Sir Andrew Fountaine met
+ me, and carried me to Mrs. Van's, where I drank the last bottle of
+ Raymond's wine, admirable good, better than any I get among the Ministry.
+ I must pick up time to answer this letter of MD's; I'll do it in a day or
+ two for certain.&mdash;I am glad I am not at Windsor, for it is very cold,
+ and I won't have a fire till November. I am contriving how to stop up my
+ grate with bricks. Patrick was drunk last night; but did not come to me,
+ else I should have given him t'other cuff. I sat this evening with Mrs.
+ Barton; it is the first day of her seeing company; but I made her merry
+ enough, and we were three hours disputing upon Whig and Tory. She grieved
+ for her brother only for form, and he was a sad dog. Is Stella well enough
+ to go to church, pray? no numbings left? no darkness in your eyes? do you
+ walk and exercise? Your exercise is ombre.&mdash;People are coming up to
+ town: the Queen will be at Hampton Court in a week. Lady Betty Germaine, I
+ hear, is come; and Lord Pembroke is coming: his wife(9) is as big with
+ child as she can tumble.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. I sat at home till four this afternoon to-day writing, and ate a roll
+ and butter; then visited Will Congreve an hour or two, and supped with
+ Lord Treasurer, who came from Windsor to-day, and brought Prior with him.
+ The Queen has thanked Prior for his good service in France, and promised
+ to make him a Commissioner of the Customs. Several of that Commission are
+ to be out; among the rest, my friend Sir Matthew Dudley. I can do nothing
+ for him, he is so hated by the Ministry. Lord Treasurer kept me till
+ twelve, so I need not tell you it is now late.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. I dined to-day with Mr. Secretary at Dr. Coatesworth's,(10) where he
+ now lodges till his house be got ready in Golden Square. One Boyer,(11) a
+ French dog, has abused me in a pamphlet, and I have got him up in a
+ messenger's hands: the Secretary promises me to swinge him. Lord Treasurer
+ told me last night that he had the honour to be abused with me in a
+ pamphlet. I must make that rogue an example, for warning to others. I was
+ to see Jack Hill this morning, who made that unfortunate expedition; and
+ there is still more misfortune; for that ship, which was admiral of his
+ fleet,(12) is blown up in the Thames, by an accident and carelessness of
+ some rogue, who was going, as they think, to steal some gunpowder: five
+ hundred men are lost. We don't yet know the particulars. I am got home by
+ seven, and am going to be busy, and you are going to play and supper; you
+ live ten times happier than I; but I should live ten times happier than
+ you if I were with MD. I saw Jemmy Leigh to-day in the street, who tells
+ me that Sterne has not lain above once these three weeks in his lodgings,
+ and he doubts he takes ill courses; he stays only till he can find Sterne
+ to go along with him, and he cannot hear of him. I begged him to inquire
+ about the box when he comes to Chester, which he promises.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. The Secretary and I dined to-day with Brigadier Britton,(13) a great
+ friend of his. The lady of the house is very gallant, about thirty-five;
+ she is said to have a great deal of wit; but I see nothing among any of
+ them that equals MD by a bar's length, as hope saved. My Lord Treasurer is
+ much out of order; he has a sore throat, and the gravel, and a pain in his
+ breast where the wound was: pray God preserve him. The Queen comes to
+ Hampton Court on Tuesday next; people are coming fast to town, and I must
+ answer MD's letter, which I can hardly find time to do, though I am at
+ home the greatest part of the day. Lady Betty Germaine and I were
+ disputing Whig and Tory to death this morning. She is grown very fat, and
+ looks mighty well. Biddy Floyd was there, and she is, I think, very much
+ spoiled with the smallpox.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. Lord Treasurer is still out of order, and that breaks our method of
+ dining there to-day. He is often subject to a sore throat, and some time
+ or other it will kill him, unless he takes more care than he is apt to do.
+ It was said about the town that poor Lord Peterborow was dead at
+ Frankfort; but he is something better, and the Queen is sending him to
+ Italy, where I hope the warm climate will recover him: he has abundance of
+ excellent qualities, and we love one another mightily. I was this
+ afternoon in the City, ate a bit of meat, and settled some things with a
+ printer. I will answer your letter on Saturday, if possible, and then send
+ away this; so to fetch up the odd days I lost at Windsor, and keep
+ constant to my fortnight. Ombre time is now coming on, and we shall have
+ nothing but Manley, and Walls, and Stoytes, and the Dean. Have you got no
+ new acquaintance? Poor girls; nobody knows MD's good qualities.&mdash;'Tis
+ very cold; but I will not have a fire till November, that's pozz.&mdash;Well,
+ but coming home to-night, I found on my table a letter from MD; faith, I
+ was angry, that is, with myself; and I was afraid too to see MD's hand so
+ soon, for fear of something, I don't know what: at last I opened it, and
+ it was over well, and a bill for the two hundred guineas. However, 'tis a
+ sad thing that this letter is not gone, nor your twenty-first answered
+ yet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. I was invited to-day to dine with Mrs. Van, with some company who did
+ not come; but I ate nothing but herrings; you must know I hardly ever eat
+ of above one thing, and that the plainest ordinary meat at table; I love
+ it best, and believe it wholesomest. You love rarities; yes you do; I wish
+ you had all that I ever see where I go. I was coming home early, and met
+ the Secretary in his chair, who persuaded me to go with him to Britton's;
+ for he said he had been all day at business, and had eaten nothing. So I
+ went, and the time passed so, that we stayed till two, so you may believe
+ 'tis late enough.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. This day has gone all wrong, by sitting up so late last night. Lord
+ Treasurer is not yet well, and can't go to Windsor. I dined with Sir
+ Matthew Dudley, and took occasion to hint to him that he would lose his
+ employment, for which I am very sorry. Lord Pembroke and his family are
+ all come to town. I was kept so long at a friend's this evening that I
+ cannot send this to-night. When I knocked at my lodgings, a fellow asked
+ me where lodged Dr. Swift? I told him I was the person: he gave me a
+ letter he brought from the Secretary's office, and I gave him a shilling:
+ when I came up, I saw Dingley's hand: faith, I was afraid, I do not know
+ what. At last it was a formal letter, from Dingley about her exchequer
+ business. Well, I'll do it on Monday, and settle it with Tooke. And now,
+ boys, for your letter, I mean the first, N.21. Let's see; come out, little
+ letter. I never had the letter from the Bishop that Raymond mentions; but
+ I have written to Ned Southwell, to desire the Duke of Ormond to speak to
+ his reverence, that he may leave off his impertinence. What a pox can they
+ think I am doing for the Archbishop here? You have a pretty notion of me
+ in Ireland, to make me an agent for the Archbishop of Dublin.&mdash;Why!
+ do you think I value your people's ingratitude about my part in serving
+ them? I remit them their first-fruits of ingratitude, as freely as I got
+ the other remitted to them. The Lord Treasurer defers writing his letter
+ to them, or else they would be plaguily confounded by this time. For he
+ designs to give the merit of it wholly to the Queen and me, and to let
+ them know it was done before the Duke of Ormond was Lord Lieutenant. You
+ visit, you dine abroad, you see friends; you pilgarlick;(14) you walk from
+ Finglas, you a cat's foot. O Lord&mdash;Lady Gore(15) hung her child by
+ the WAIST; what is that waist?(16) I don't understand that word; he must
+ hang on till you explain or spell it.&mdash;I don't believe he was pretty,
+ that's a liiii.&mdash;Pish! burn your First-Fruits; again at it. Stella
+ has made twenty false spellings in her writing; I'll send them to you all
+ back again on the other side of this letter, to mend them; I won't miss
+ one. Why, I think there were seventeen bishops' names to the letter Lord
+ Oxford received.&mdash;I will send you some pamphlets by Leigh; put me in
+ mind of it on Monday, for I shall go then to the printer; yes, and the
+ Miscellany. I am mightily obliged to Walls, but I don't deserve it by any
+ usage of him here, having seen him but twice, and once en passant. Mrs.
+ Manley forsworn ombre! What! and no blazing star appear? no monsters born?
+ no whale thrown up? have you not found out some evasion for her? She had
+ no such regard to oaths in her younger days. I got the books for nothing,
+ Madam Dingley; but the wine I got not; it was but a promise.&mdash;Yes, my
+ head is pretty well in the main, only now and then a little threatening or
+ so.&mdash;You talk of my reconciling some great folks. I tell you what.
+ The Secretary told me last night that he had found the reason why the
+ Queen was cold to him for some months past; that a friend had told it him
+ yesterday; and it was, that they suspected he was at the bottom with the
+ Duke of Marlborough. Then he said he had reflected upon all I had spoken
+ to him long ago, but he thought it had only been my suspicion, and my zeal
+ and kindness for him. I said I had reason to take that very ill, to
+ imagine I knew so little of the world as to talk at a venture to a great
+ Minister; that I had gone between him and Lord Treasurer often, and told
+ each of them what I had said to the other, and that I had informed him so
+ before. He said all that you may imagine to excuse himself, and approve my
+ conduct. I told him I knew all along that this proceeding of mine was the
+ surest way to send me back to my willows in Ireland, but that I regarded
+ it not, provided I could do the kingdom service in keeping them well
+ together. I minded him how often I had told Lord Treasurer, Lord Keeper,
+ and him together, that all things depended on their union, and that my
+ comfort was to see them love one another; and I had told them all singly
+ that I had not said this by chance, etc. He was in a rage to be thus
+ suspected; swears he will be upon a better foot, or none at all; and I do
+ not see how they can well want him in this juncture. I hope to find a way
+ of settling this matter. I act an honest part, that will bring me neither
+ honour nor praise. MD must think the better of me for it: nobody else
+ shall ever know of it. Here's politics enough for once; but Madam DD gave
+ me occasion for it. I think I told you I have got into lodgings that don't
+ smell ill&mdash;O Lord! the spectacles: well, I'll do that on Monday too;
+ although it goes against me to be employed for folks that neither you nor
+ I care a groat for. Is the eight pounds from Hawkshaw included in the
+ thirty-nine pounds five shillings and twopence? How do I know by this how
+ my account stands? Can't you write five or six lines to cast it up? Mine
+ is forty-four pounds per annum, and eight pounds from Hawkshaw makes
+ fifty-two pounds. Pray set it right, and let me know; you had best.&mdash;And
+ so now I have answered N.21, and 'tis late, and I will answer N.22 in my
+ next: this cannot go to-night, but shall on Tuesday: and so go to your
+ play, and lose your money, with your two eggs a penny; silly jade; you
+ witty? very pretty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21. Mrs. Van would have me dine with her again to-day, and so I did,
+ though Lady Mountjoy has sent two or three times to have me see and dine
+ with her, and she is a little body I love very well. My head has ached a
+ little in the evenings these three or four days, but it is not of the
+ giddy sort, so I do not much value it. I was to see Lord Harley to-day,
+ but Lord Treasurer took physic; and I could not see him. He has voided
+ much gravel, and is better, but not well: he talks of going on Tuesday to
+ see the Queen at Hampton Court; I wish he may be able. I never saw so fine
+ a summer day as this was: how is it with you, pray? and can't you
+ remember, naughty packs? I han't seen Lord Pembroke yet. He will be sorry
+ to miss Dilly: I wonder you say nothing of Dilly's being got to Ireland;
+ if he be not there soon, I shall have some certain odd thoughts: guess
+ them if you can.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22. I dined in the City to-day with Dr. Freind, at one of my printers: I
+ inquired for Leigh, but could not find him: I have forgot what sort of
+ apron you want. I must rout among your letters, a needle in a bottle of
+ hay. I gave Sterne directions, but where to find him Lord knows. I have
+ bespoken the spectacles; got a set of Examiners, and five pamphlets, which
+ I have either written or contributed to, except the best, which is the
+ vindication of the Duke of Marlborough, and is entirely of the author of
+ the Atalantis.(17) I have settled Dingley's affair with Tooke, who has
+ undertaken it, and understands it. I have bespoken a Miscellany: what
+ would you have me do more? It cost me a shilling coming home; it rains
+ terribly, and did so in the morning. Lord Treasurer has had an ill day, in
+ much pain. He writes and does business in his chamber now he is ill: the
+ man is bewitched: he desires to see me, and I'll maul him, but he will not
+ value it a rush. I am half weary of them all. I often burst out into these
+ thoughts, and will certainly steal away as soon as I decently can. I have
+ many friends, and many enemies; and the last are more constant in their
+ nature. I have no shuddering at all to think of retiring to my old
+ circumstances, if you can be easy; but I will always live in Ireland as I
+ did the last time; I will not hunt for dinners there, nor converse with
+ more than a very few.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23. Morning. This goes to-day, and shall be sealed by and by. Lord
+ Treasurer takes physic again to-day: I believe I shall dine with Lord
+ Dupplin. Mr. Tooke brought me a letter directed for me at Morphew's the
+ bookseller. I suppose, by the postage, it came from Ireland. It is a
+ woman's hand, and seems false spelt on purpose: it is in such sort of
+ verse as Harris's petition;(18) rallies me for writing merry things, and
+ not upon divinity; and is like the subject of the Archbishop's last
+ letter, as I told you. Can you guess whom it came from? It is not ill
+ written; pray find it out. There is a Latin verse at the end of it all
+ rightly spelt; yet the English, as I think, affectedly wrong in many
+ places. My plaguing time is coming. A young fellow brought me a letter
+ from Judge Coote,(19) with recommendation to be lieutenant of a
+ man-of-war. He is the son of one Echlin,(20) who was minister of Belfast
+ before Tisdall, and I have got some other new customers; but I shall
+ trouble my friends as little as possible. Saucy Stella used to jeer me for
+ meddling with other folks' affairs; but now I am punished for it.&mdash;Patrick
+ has brought the candle, and I have no more room. Farewell, etc. etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here is a full and true account of Stella's new spelling:&mdash;(21)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Plaguely, Plaguily. Dineing, Dining. Straingers, Strangers. Chais, Chase.
+ Waist, Wast. Houer, Hour. Immagin, Imagine. A bout, About. Intellegence,
+ Intelligence. Merrit, Merit. Aboundance, Abundance. Secreet, Secret.
+ Phamphlets, Pamphlets. Bussiness, Business.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tell me truly, sirrah, how many of these are mistakes of the pen, and how
+ many are you to answer for as real ill spelling? There are but fourteen; I
+ said twenty by guess. You must not be angry, for I will have you spell
+ right, let the world go how it will. Though, after all, there is but a
+ mistake of one letter in any of these words. I allow you henceforth but
+ six false spellings in every letter you send me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0036" id="link2H_4_0036">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 33.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, Oct. 23, 1711.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I dined with Lord Dupplin as I told you I would, and put my thirty-second
+ into the post-office my own self; and I believe there has not been one
+ moment since we parted wherein a letter was not upon the road going or
+ coming to or from PMD. If the Queen knew it, she would give us a pension;
+ for it is we bring good luck to their post-boys and their packets; else
+ they would break their necks and sink. But, an old saying and a true one:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Be it snow, or storm, or hail,
+ PMD's letters never fail;
+ Cross winds may sometimes make them tarry,
+ But PMD's letters can't miscarry.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Terrible rain to-day, but it cleared up at night enough to save my
+ twelvepence coming home. Lord Treasurer is much better this evening. I
+ hate to have him ill, he is so confoundedly careless. I won't answer your
+ letter yet, so be satisfied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24. I called at Lord Treasurer's to-day at noon: he was eating some broth
+ in his bed-chamber, undressed, with a thousand papers about him. He has a
+ little fever upon him, and his eye terribly bloodshot; yet he dressed
+ himself and went out to the Treasury. He told me he had a letter from a
+ lady with a complaint against me; it was from Mrs. Cutts, a sister of Lord
+ Cutts, who writ to him that I had abused her brother:(1) you remember the
+ "Salamander," it is printed in the Miscellany. I told my lord that I would
+ never regard complaints, and that I expected, whenever he received any
+ against me, he would immediately put them into the fire, and forget them,
+ else I should have no quiet. I had a little turn in my head this morning;
+ which, though it did not last above a moment, yet being of the true sort,
+ has made me as weak as a dog all this day. 'Tis the first I have had this
+ half-year. I shall take my pills if I hear of it again. I dined at Lady
+ Mountjoy's with Harry Coote,(2) and went to see Lord Pembroke upon his
+ coming to town.&mdash;The Whig party are furious against a peace, and
+ every day some ballad comes out reflecting on the Ministry on that
+ account. The Secretary St. John has seized on a dozen booksellers and
+ publishers into his messengers' hands.(3) Some of the foreign Ministers
+ have published the preliminaries agreed on here between France and
+ England; and people rail at them as insufficient to treat a peace upon;
+ but the secret is, that the French have agreed to articles much more
+ important, which our Ministers have not communicated, and the people, who
+ think they know all, are discontented that there is no more. This was an
+ inconvenience I foretold to the Secretary, but we could contrive no way to
+ fence against it. So there's politics for you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25. The Queen is at Hampton Court: she went on Tuesday in that terrible
+ rain. I dined with Lewis at his lodgings, to despatch some business we
+ had. I sent this morning and evening to Lord Treasurer, and he is much
+ worse by going out; I am in pain about evening. He has sent for Dr.
+ Radcliffe; pray God preserve him. The Chancellor of the Exchequer(4)
+ showed me to-day a ballad(5) in manuscript against Lord Treasurer and his
+ South Sea project; it is very sharply written: if it be not printed, I
+ will send it you. If it be, it shall go in your packet of pamphlets.&mdash;I
+ found out your letter about directions for the apron, and have ordered to
+ be bought a cheap green silk work apron; I have it by heart. I sat this
+ evening with Mrs. Barton, who is my near neighbour. It was a delicious
+ day, and I got my walk, and was thinking whether MD was walking too just
+ at that time that Presto was. This paper does not cost me a farthing, I
+ have it from the Secretary's office. I long till to-morrow to know how my
+ Lord Treasurer sleeps this night, and to hear he mends: we are all undone
+ without him; so pray for him, sirrahs, and don't stay too late at the
+ Dean's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26. I dined with Mrs. Van; for the weather is so bad, and I am so busy,
+ that I can't dine with great folks: and besides I dare eat but little, to
+ keep my head in order, which is better. Lord Treasurer is very ill, but I
+ hope in no danger. We have no quiet with the Whigs, they are so violent
+ against a peace; but I'll cool them, with a vengeance, very soon. I have
+ not heard from the Bishop of Clogher, whether he has got his statues.(6) I
+ writ to him six weeks ago; he's so busy with his Parliament. I won't
+ answer your letter yet, say what you will, saucy girls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27. I forgot to go about some business this morning, which cost me double
+ the time; and I was forced to be at the Secretary's office till four, and
+ lose my dinner; so I went to Mrs. Van's, and made them get me three
+ herrings, which I am very fond of, and they are a light victuals: besides,
+ I was to have supped at Lady Ashburnham's; but the drab did not call for
+ us in her coach, as she promised, but sent for us, and so I sent my
+ excuses. It has been a terrible rainy day, but so flattering in the
+ morning, that I would needs go out in my new hat. I met Leigh and Sterne
+ as I was going into the Park. Leigh says he will go to Ireland in ten
+ days, if he can get Sterne to go with him; so I will send him the things
+ for MD, and I have desired him to inquire about the box. I hate that
+ Sterne for his carelessness about it; but it was my fault.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29. I was all this terrible rainy day with my friend Lewis upon business
+ of importance; and I dined with him, and came home about seven, and
+ thought I would amuse myself a little, after the pains I had taken. I saw
+ a volume of Congreve's plays in my room, that Patrick had taken to read;
+ and I looked into it, and in mere loitering read in it till twelve, like
+ an owl and a fool: if ever I do so again; never saw the like. Count
+ Gallas,(7) the Emperor's Envoy, you will hear, is in disgrace with us: the
+ Queen has ordered her Ministers to have no more commerce with him; the
+ reason is, the fool writ a rude letter to Lord Dartmouth, Secretary of
+ State, complaining of our proceedings about a peace; and he is always in
+ close confidence with Lord Wharton and Sunderland, and others of the late
+ Ministry. I believe you begin to think there will be no peace; the Whigs
+ here are sure it cannot be, and stocks are fallen again. But I am
+ confident there will, unless France plays us tricks; and you may venture a
+ wager with any of your Whig acquaintance that we shall not have another
+ campaign. You will get more by it than by ombre, sirrah.&mdash;I let slip
+ telling you yesterday's journal, which I thought to have done this
+ morning, but blundered. I dined yesterday at Harry Coote's, with Lord
+ Hatton,(8) Mr. Finch, a son of Lord Nottingham, and Sir Andrew Fountaine.
+ I left them soon, but hear they stayed till two in the morning, and were
+ all drunk: and so good-night for last night, and good-night for to-night.
+ You blundering goosecap, an't you ashamed to blunder to young ladies? I
+ shall have a fire in three or four days now, oh ho.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30. I was to-day in the City concerting some things with a printer, and am
+ to be to-morrow all day busy with Mr. Secretary about the same. I won't
+ tell you now; but the Ministers reckon it will do abundance of good, and
+ open the eyes of the nation, who are half bewitched against a peace. Few
+ of this generation can remember anything but war and taxes, and they think
+ it is as it should be; whereas 'tis certain we are the most undone people
+ in Europe, as I am afraid I shall make appear beyond all contradiction.
+ But I forgot; I won't tell you what I will do, nor what I will not do: so
+ let me alone, and go to Stoyte, and give Goody Stoyte and Catherine my
+ humble service; I love Goody Stoyte better than Goody Walls. Who'll pay me
+ for this green apron? I will have the money; it cost ten shillings and
+ sixpence. I think it plaguy dear for a cheap thing; but they said that
+ English silk would cockle,(9) and I know not what. You have the making
+ into the bargain. 'Tis right Italian: I have sent it and the pamphlets to
+ Leigh, and will send the Miscellanies and spectacles in a day or two. I
+ would send more; but, faith, I'm plaguy poor at present.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 31. The devil's in this Secretary: when I went this morning he had people
+ with him; but says he, "we are to dine with Prior to-day, and then will do
+ all our business in the afternoon": at two, Prior sends word he is
+ otherwise engaged; then the Secretary and I go and dine with Brigadier
+ Britton, sit till eight, grow merry, no business done; he is in haste to
+ see Lady Jersey;(10) we part, and appoint no time to meet again. This is
+ the fault of all the present Ministers, teasing me to death for my
+ assistance, laying the whole weight of their affairs upon it, yet slipping
+ opportunities. Lord Treasurer mends every day, though slowly: I hope he
+ will take care of himself. Pray, will you send to Parvisol to send me a
+ bill of twenty pounds as soon as he can, for I want money. I must have
+ money; I will have money, sirrahs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nov. 1. I went to-day into the City to settle some business with
+ Stratford, and to dine with him; but he was engaged, and I was so angry I
+ would not dine with any other merchant, but went to my printer, and ate a
+ bit, and did business of mischief with him, and I shall have the
+ spectacles and Miscellany to-morrow, and leave them with Leigh. A fine day
+ always makes me go into the City, if I can spare time, because it is
+ exercise; and that does me more good than anything. I have heard nothing
+ since of my head, but a little, I don't know how, sometimes: but I am very
+ temperate, especially now the Treasurer is ill, and the Ministers often at
+ Hampton Court, and the Secretary not yet fixed in his house, and I hate
+ dining with many of my old acquaintance. Here has been a fellow discovered
+ going out of the East India House with sixteen thousand pounds in money
+ and bills; he would have escaped, if he had not been so uneasy with
+ thirst, that he stole out before his time, and was caught. But what is
+ that to MD? I wish we had the money, provided the East India Company was
+ never the worse; you know we must not covet, etc. Our weather, for this
+ fortnight past, is chequered, a fair and a rainy day: this was very fine,
+ and I have walked four miles; wish MD would do so, lazy sluttikins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. It has rained all day with a continuendo, and I went in a chair to dine
+ with Mrs. Van; always there in a very rainy day. But I made a shift to
+ come back afoot. I live a very retired life, pay very few visits, and keep
+ but very little company; I read no newspapers. I am sorry I sent you the
+ Examiner, for the printer is going to print them in a small volume: it
+ seems the author is too proud to have them printed by subscription, though
+ his friends offered, they say, to make it worth five hundred pounds to
+ him. The Spectators are likewise printing in a larger and a smaller
+ volume, so I believe they are going to leave them off, and indeed people
+ grow weary of them, though they are often prettily written. We have had no
+ news for me to send you now towards the end of my letter. The Queen has
+ the gout a little: I hoped the Lord Treasurer would have had it too, but
+ Radcliffe told me yesterday it was the rheumatism in his knee and foot;
+ however, he mends, and I hope will be abroad in a short time. I am told
+ they design giving away several employments before the Parliament sits,
+ which will be the thirteenth instant. I either do not like, or not
+ understand this policy; and if Lord Treasurer does not mend soon, they
+ must give them just before the session. But he is the greatest
+ procrastinator in the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. A fine day this, and I walked a pretty deal. I stuffed the Secretary's
+ pockets with papers, which he must read and settle at Hampton Court, where
+ he went to-day, and stays some time. They have no lodgings for me there,
+ so I can't go, for the town is small, chargeable, and inconvenient. Lord
+ Treasurer had a very ill night last night, with much pain in his knee and
+ foot, but is easier to-day.&mdash;And so I went to visit Prior about some
+ business, and so he was not within, and so Sir Andrew Fountaine made me
+ dine to-day again with Mrs. Van, and I came home soon, remembering this
+ must go to-night, and that I had a letter of MD's to answer. O Lord, where
+ is it? let me see; so, so, here it is. You grudge writing so soon. Pox on
+ that bill! the woman would have me manage that money for her. I do not
+ know what to do with it now I have it: I am like the unprofitable steward
+ in the Gospel: I laid it up in a napkin; there thou hast what is thine
+ own, etc. Well, well, I know of your new Mayor. (I'll tell you a pun: a
+ fishmonger owed a man two crowns; so he sent him a piece of bad ling and a
+ tench, and then said he was paid: how is that now? find it out; for I
+ won't tell it you: which of you finds it out?) Well, but as I was saying,
+ what care I for your Mayor? I fancy Ford may tell Forbes right about my
+ returning to Ireland before Christmas, or soon after. I'm sorry you did
+ not go on with your story about Pray God you be John; I never heard it in
+ my life, and wonder what it can be.&mdash;Ah, Stella, faith, you leaned
+ upon your Bible to think what to say when you writ that. Yes, that story
+ of the Secretary's making me an example is true; "never heard it before;"
+ why, how could you hear it? is it possible to tell you the hundredth part
+ of what passes in our companies here? The Secretary is as easy with me as
+ Mr. Addison was. I have often thought what a splutter Sir William Temple
+ makes about being Secretary of State:(11) I think Mr. St. John the
+ greatest young man I ever knew; wit, capacity, beauty, quickness of
+ apprehension, good learning, and an excellent taste; the best orator in
+ the House of Commons, admirable conversation, good nature, and good
+ manners; generous, and a despiser of money. His only fault is talking to
+ his friends in way of complaint of too great a load of business, which
+ looks a little like affectation; and he endeavours too much to mix the
+ fine gentleman and man of pleasure with the man of business. What truth
+ and sincerity he may have I know not: he is now but thirty-two, and has
+ been Secretary above a year. Is not all this extraordinary? how he stands
+ with the Queen and Lord Treasurer I have told you before. This is his
+ character; and I believe you will be diverted by knowing it. I writ to the
+ Archbishop of Dublin, Bishop of Cloyne(12) and of Clogher together, five
+ weeks ago from Windsor: I hope they had my letters; pray know if Clogher
+ had his.&mdash;Fig for your physician and his advice, Madam Dingley: if I
+ grow worse, I will; otherwise I will trust to temperance and exercise:
+ your fall of the leaf; what care I when the leaves fall? I am sorry to see
+ them fall with all my heart; but why should I take physic because leaves
+ fall off from trees? that won't hinder them from falling. If a man falls
+ from a horse, must I take physic for that?&mdash;This arguing makes you
+ mad; but it is true right reason, not to be disproved.&mdash;I am glad at
+ heart to hear poor Stella is better; use exercise and walk, spend pattens
+ and spare potions, wear out clogs and waste claret. Have you found out my
+ pun of the fishmonger? don't read a word more till you have got it. And
+ Stella is handsome again, you say? and is she fat? I have sent to Leigh
+ the set of Examiners: the first thirteen were written by several hands,
+ some good, some bad; the next three-and-thirty were all by one hand, that
+ makes forty-six: then that author,(13) whoever he was, laid it down on
+ purpose to confound guessers; and the last six were written by a
+ woman.(14) Then there is an account of Guiscard by the same woman, but the
+ facts sent by Presto. Then an answer to the letter to the Lords about
+ Gregg by Presto; Prior's Journey by Presto; Vindication of the Duke of
+ Marlborough, entirely by the same woman; Comment on Hare's Sermon by the
+ same woman, only hints sent to the printer from Presto to give her.(15)
+ Then there's the Miscellany, an apron for Stella, a pound of chocolate,
+ without sugar, for Stella, a fine snuff-rasp of ivory, given me by Mrs.
+ St. John for Dingley, and a large roll of tobacco, which she must hide or
+ cut shorter out of modesty, and four pair of spectacles for the Lord knows
+ who. There's the cargo, I hope it will come safe. Oh, Mrs. Masham and I
+ are very well; we write to one another, but it is upon business; I believe
+ I told you so before: pray pardon my forgetfulness in these cases; poor
+ Presto can't help it. MD shall have the money as soon as Tooke gets it.
+ And so I think I have answered all, and the paper is out, and now I have
+ fetched up my week, and will send you another this day fortnight.&mdash;Why,
+ you rogues, two crowns make TENCH-ILL-LING:(16) you are so dull you could
+ never have found it out. Farewell, etc. etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0037" id="link2H_4_0037">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 34.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, Nov. 3, 1711.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ My thirty-third lies now before me just finished, and I am going to seal
+ and send it, so let me know whether you would have me add anything: I gave
+ you my journal of this day; and it is now nine at night, and I am going to
+ be busy for an hour or two.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. I left a friend's house to-day where I was invited, just when dinner
+ was setting on, and pretended I was engaged, because I saw some fellows I
+ did not know; and went to Sir Matthew Dudley's, where I had the same
+ inconvenience, but he would not let me go; otherwise I would have gone
+ home, and sent for a slice of mutton and a pot of ale, rather than dine
+ with persons unknown, as bad, for aught I know, as your deans, parsons,
+ and curates. Bad slabby weather to-day.&mdash;Now methinks I write at
+ ease, when I have no letter of MD's to answer. But I mistook, and have got
+ the large paper. The Queen is laid up with the gout at Hampton Court: she
+ is now seldom without it any long time together; I fear it will wear her
+ out in a very few years. I plainly find I have less twitchings about my
+ toes since these Ministers are sick and out of town, and that I don't dine
+ with them. I would compound for a light easy gout to be perfectly well in
+ my head.&mdash;Pray walk when the frost comes, young ladies go a
+ frost-biting. It comes into my head, that, from the very time you first
+ went to Ireland, I have been always plying you to walk and read. The young
+ fellows here have begun a kind of fashion to walk, and many of them have
+ got swingeing strong shoes on purpose; it has got as far as several young
+ lords; if it hold, it would be a very good thing. Lady Lucy(1) and I are
+ fallen out; she rails at me, and I have left visiting her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. MD was very troublesome to me last night in my sleep; I was a dreamed,
+ methought, that Stella was here. I asked her after Dingley, and she said
+ she had left her in Ireland, because she designed her stay to be short,
+ and such stuff.&mdash;Monsieur Pontchartain, the Secretary of State in
+ France, and Monsieur Fontenelle, the Secretary of the Royal Academy there
+ (who writ the Dialogues des Morts, etc.), have sent letters to Lord
+ Pembroke that the Academy have, with the King's consent, chosen him one of
+ their members in the room of one who is lately dead. But the cautious
+ gentleman has given me the letters to show my Lord Dartmouth and Mr. St.
+ John, our two Secretaries, and let them see there is no treason in them;
+ which I will do on Wednesday, when they come from Hampton Court. The
+ letters are very handsome, and it is a very great mark of honour and
+ distinction to Lord Pembroke. I hear the two French Ministers are come
+ over again about the peace; but I have seen nobody of consequence to know
+ the truth. I dined to-day with a lady of my acquaintance, who was sick, in
+ her bed-chamber, upon three herrings and a chicken: the dinner was my
+ bespeaking. We begin now to have chestnuts and Seville oranges; have you
+ the latter yet? 'Twas a terrible windy day, and we had processions in
+ carts of the Pope and the Devil, and the butchers rang their cleavers. You
+ know this is the Fifth of November, Popery and gunpowder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. Since I am used to this way of writing, I fancy I could hardly make out
+ a long letter to MD without it. I think I ought to allow for every line
+ taken up by telling you where I dined; but that will not be above seven
+ lines in all, half a line to a dinner. Your Ingoldsby(2) is going over,
+ and they say here he is to be made a lord.&mdash;Here was I staying in my
+ room till two this afternoon for that puppy Sir Andrew Fountaine, who was
+ to go with me into the City, and never came; and if I had not shot a
+ dinner flying, with one Mr. Murray, I might have fasted, or gone to an
+ alehouse.&mdash;You never said one word of Goody Stoyte in your letter;
+ but I suppose these winter nights we shall hear more of her. Does the
+ Provost(3) laugh as much as he used to do? We reckon him here a
+ good-for-nothing fellow.&mdash;I design to write to your Dean one of these
+ days, but I can never find time, nor what to say.&mdash;I will think of
+ something: but if DD(4) were not in Ireland I believe seriously I should
+ not think of the place twice a year. Nothing there ever makes the subject
+ of talk in any company where I am.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. I went to-day to the City on business; but stopped at a printer's, and
+ stayed there: it was a most delicious day. I hear the Parliament is to be
+ prorogued for a fortnight longer; I suppose, either because the Queen has
+ the gout, or that Lord Treasurer is not well, or that they would do
+ something more towards a peace. I called at Lord Treasurer's at noon, and
+ sat a while with Lord Harley, but his father was asleep. A bookseller has
+ reprinted or new-titled a sermon of Tom Swift's,(5) printed last year, and
+ publishes an advertisement calling it Dr. Swift's Sermon. Some friend of
+ Lord Galway(6) has, by his directions, published a four-shilling book
+ about his conduct in Spain, to defend him; I have but just seen it. But
+ what care you for books, except Presto's Miscellanies? Leigh promised to
+ call and see me, but has not yet; I hope he will take care of his cargo,
+ and get your Chester box. A murrain take that box! everything is spoiled
+ that is in it. How does the strong box do? You say nothing of Raymond: is
+ his wife brought to bed again; or how? has he finished his house; paid his
+ debts; and put out the rest of the money to use? I am glad to hear poor
+ Joe is like to get his two hundred pounds. I suppose Trim is now reduced
+ to slavery again. I am glad of it; the people were as great rascals as the
+ gentlemen. But I must go to bed, sirrahs: the Secretary is still at
+ Hampton Court with my papers, or is come only to-night. They plague me
+ with attending them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. I was with the Secretary this morning, and we dined with Prior, and did
+ business this afternoon till about eight; and I must alter and undo, and a
+ clutter. I am glad the Parliament is prorogued. I stayed with Prior till
+ eleven; the Secretary left us at eight. Prior, I believe, will be one of
+ those employed to make the peace, when a Congress is opened. Lord
+ Ashburnham told to-day at the Coffee-house that Lord Harley(7) was
+ yesterday morning married to the Duke of Newcastle's daughter, the great
+ heiress, and it got about all the town. But I saw Lord Harley yesterday at
+ noon in his nightgown, and he dined in the City with Prior and others; so
+ it is not true; but I hope it will be so; for I know it has been privately
+ managing this long time:(8) the lady will not have half her father's
+ estate; for the Duke left Lord Pelham's son his heir.(9) The widow Duchess
+ will not stand to the will, and she is now at law with Pelham. However, at
+ worst, the girl will have about ten thousand pounds a year to support the
+ honour; for Lord Treasurer will never save a groat for himself. Lord
+ Harley is a very valuable young gentleman; and they say the girl is
+ handsome, and has good sense, but red hair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. I designed a jaunt into the City to-day to be merry, but was
+ disappointed; so one always is in this life; and I could not see Lord
+ Dartmouth to-day, with whom I had some business. Business and pleasure
+ both disappointed. You can go to your Dean, and for want of him, Goody
+ Stoyte, or Walls, or Manley, and meet everywhere with cards and claret. I
+ dined privately with a friend on a herring and chicken, and half a flask
+ of bad Florence. I begin to have fires now, when the mornings are cold. I
+ have got some loose bricks at the back of my grate for good husbandry.
+ Fine weather. Patrick tells me my caps are wearing out. I know not how to
+ get others. I want a necessary woman strangely. I am as helpless as an
+ elephant.&mdash;I had three packets from the Archbishop of Dublin, cost me
+ four shillings, all about Higgins,(10) printed stuff, and two long
+ letters. His people forgot to enclose them to Lewis; and they were only
+ directed to Doctor Swift, without naming London or anything else. I wonder
+ how they reached me, unless the postmaster directed them. I have read all
+ the trash, and am weary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. Why, if you must have it out, something is to be published of great
+ moment,(11) and three or four great people are to see there are no
+ mistakes in point of fact: and 'tis so troublesome to send it among them,
+ and get their corrections, that I am weary as a dog. I dined to-day with
+ the printer, and was there all the afternoon; and it plagues me, and
+ there's an end, and what would you have? Lady Dupplin, Lord Treasurer's
+ daughter,(12) is brought to bed of a son. Lord Treasurer has had an ugly
+ return of his gravel. 'Tis good for us to live in gravel pits,(13) but not
+ for gravel pits to live in us; a man in this case should leave no stone
+ unturned. Lord Treasurer's sickness, the Queen's gout, the forwarding the
+ peace, occasion putting off the Parliament a fortnight longer. My head has
+ had no ill returns. I had good walking to-day in the City, and take all
+ opportunities of it on purpose for my health; but I can't walk in the
+ Park, because that is only for walking's sake, and loses time, so I mix it
+ with business. I wish MD walked half as much as Presto. If I was with you,
+ I'd make you walk; I would walk behind or before you, and you should have
+ masks on, and be tucked up like anything; and Stella is naturally a stout
+ walker, and carries herself firm; methinks I see her strut, and step
+ clever over a kennel; and Dingley would do well enough if her petticoats
+ were pinned up; but she is so embroiled, and so fearful, and then Stella
+ scolds, and Dingley stumbles, and is so daggled.(14) Have you got the
+ whalebone petticoats among you yet? I hate them; a woman here may hide a
+ moderate gallant under them. Pshaw, what's all this I'm saying? Methinks I
+ am talking to MD face to face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. Did I tell you that old Frowde,(15) the old fool, is selling his
+ estate at Pepperhara, and is skulking about the town nobody knows where?
+ and who do you think manages all this for him, but that rogue Child,(16)
+ the double squire of Farnham? I have put Mrs. Masham, the Queen's
+ favourite, upon buying it, but that is yet a great secret; and I have
+ employed Lady Oglethorpe to inquire about it. I was with Lady Oglethorpe
+ to-day, who is come to town for a week or two, and to-morrow I will see to
+ hunt out the old fool: he is utterly ruined, and at this present in some
+ blind alley with some dirty wench. He has two sons that must starve, and
+ he never gives them a farthing. If Mrs. Masham buys the land, I will
+ desire her to get the Queen to give some pension to the old fool, to keep
+ him from absolutely starving. What do you meddle with other people's
+ affairs for? says Stella. Oh, but Mr. Masham and his wife are very urgent
+ with me, since I first put them in the head of it. I dined with Sir
+ Matthew Dudley, who, I doubt, will soon lose his employment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. Morning. I am going to hunt out old Frowde, and to do some business in
+ the City. I have not yet called to Patrick to know whether it be fair.&mdash;It
+ has been past dropping these two days. Rainy weather hurts my pate and my
+ purse. He tells me 'tis very windy, and begins to look dark; woe be to my
+ shillings! an old saying and a true,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Few fillings,
+ Many shillings.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ If the day be dark, my purse will be light.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ To my enemies be this curse,
+ A dark day and a light purse.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ And so I'll rise, and go to my fire, for Patrick tells me I have a fire;
+ yet it is not shaving-day, nor is the weather cold; this is too
+ extravagant. What is become of Dilly? I suppose you have him with you.
+ Stella is just now showing a white leg, and putting it into the slipper.
+ Present my service to her, and tell her I am engaged to the Dean, and
+ desire she will come too: or, Dingley, can't you write a note? This is
+ Stella's morning dialogue, no, morning speech I mean.&mdash;Morrow,
+ sirrahs, and let me rise as well as you; but I promise you Walls can't
+ dine with the Dean to-day, for she is to be at Mrs. Proby's just after
+ dinner, and to go with Gracy Spencer(17) to the shops to buy a yard of
+ muslin, and a silver lace for an under petticoat. Morrow again, sirrahs.&mdash;At
+ night. I dined with Stratford in the City, but could not finish my affairs
+ with him; but now I am resolved to buy five hundred pounds South Sea
+ Stock, which will cost me three hundred and eighty ready money; and I will
+ make use of the bill of a hundred pounds you sent me, and transfer Mrs.
+ Walls over to Hawkshaw; or if she dislikes it, I will borrow a hundred
+ pounds of the Secretary, and repay her. Three shillings coach-hire to-day.
+ I have spoken to Frowde's brother to get me the lowest price of the
+ estate, to tell Mrs. Masham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. I dined privately with a friend to-day in the neighbourhood. Last
+ Saturday night I came home, and the drab had just washed my room, and my
+ bed-chamber was all wet, and I was forced to go to bed in my own defence,
+ and no fire: I was sick on Sunday, and now have got a swingeing cold. I
+ scolded like a dog at Patrick, although he was out with me: I detest
+ washing of rooms; can't they wash them in a morning, and make a fire, and
+ leave open the windows? I slept not a wink last night for hawking(18) and
+ spitting: and now everybody has colds. Here's a clutter: I'll go to bed
+ and sleep if I can.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. Lady Mountjoy sent to me two days ago, so I dined with her to-day, and
+ in the evening went to see Lord Treasurer. I found Patrick had been just
+ there with a how d'ye,(19) and my lord had returned answer that he desired
+ to see me. Mrs. Masham was with him when I came, and they are never
+ disturbed: 'tis well she is not very handsome; they sit alone together
+ settling the nation. I sat with Lady Oxford, and stopped Mrs. Masham as
+ she came out, and told her what progress I had made, etc., and then went
+ to Lord Treasurer: he is very well, only uneasy at rising or sitting, with
+ some rheumatic pain in his thigh, and a foot weak. He showed me a small
+ paper, sent by an unknown hand to one Mr. Cook, who sent it to my lord: it
+ was written in plain large letters thus
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Though G&mdash;&mdash;d's knife did not succeed,
+ A F&mdash;&mdash;n's yet may do the deed."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ And a little below: "BURN THIS, YOU DOG." My lord has frequently such
+ letters as these: once he showed me one, which was a vision describing a
+ certain man, his dress, his sword, and his countenance, who was to murder
+ my lord. And he told me he saw a fellow in the chapel at Windsor with a
+ dress very like it. They often send him letters signed, "Your humble
+ servant, The Devil," and such stuff. I sat with him till after ten, and
+ have business to do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. The Secretary came yesterday to town from Hampton Court, so I went to
+ him early this morning; but he went back last night again: and coming home
+ to-night I found a letter from him to tell me that he was just come from
+ Hampton Court, and just returning, and will not be here till Saturday
+ night. A pox take him! he stops all my business. I'll beg leave to come
+ back when I have got over this, and hope to see MD in Ireland soon after
+ Christmas.&mdash;I'm weary of Courts, and want my journeys to Laracor;
+ they did me more good than all the Ministries these twenty years. I dined
+ to-day in the City, but did no business as I designed. Lady Mountjoy tells
+ me that Dilly is got to Ireland, and that the Archbishop of Dublin was the
+ cause of his returning so soon. The Parliament was prorogued two days ago
+ for a fortnight, which, with the Queen's absence, makes the town very dull
+ and empty. They tell me the Duke of Ormond brings all the world away with
+ him from Ireland. London has nothing so bad in it in winter as your knots
+ of Irish folks; but I go to no coffee-house, and so I seldom see them.
+ This letter shall go on Saturday; and then I am even with the world again.
+ I have lent money, and cannot get it, and am forced to borrow for myself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. My man made a blunder this morning, and let up a visitor, when I had
+ ordered to see nobody; so I was forced to hurry a hang-dog instrument of
+ mine into my bed-chamber, and keep him cooling his heels there above an
+ hour.&mdash;I am going on fairly in the common forms of a great cold; I
+ believe it will last me about ten days in all.&mdash;I should have told
+ you, that in those two verses sent to Lord Treasurer, G&mdash;-d stands
+ for Guiscard; that is easy; but we differed about F&mdash;-n; I thought it
+ was for Frenchman, because he hates them, and they him: and so it would
+ be, That although Guiscard's knife missed its design, the knife of a
+ Frenchman might yet do it. My lord thinks it stands for Felton, the name
+ of him that stabbed the first Duke of Buckingham. Sir Andrew Fountaine and
+ I dined with the Vans to-day, and my cold made me loiter all the evening.
+ Stay, young women, don't you begin to owe me a letter? just a month to-day
+ since I had your N.22. I'll stay a week longer, and then, I'll expect like
+ agog; till then you may play at ombre, and so forth, as you please. The
+ Whigs are still crying down our peace, but we will have it, I hope, in
+ spite of them: the Emperor comes now with his two eggs a penny, and
+ promises wonders to continue the war; but it is too late; only I hope the
+ fear of it will serve to spur on the French to be easy and sincere: Night,
+ sirrahs; I'll go early to bed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. Morning. This goes to-night; I will put it myself in the post-office.
+ I had just now a long letter from the Archbishop of Dublin, giving me an
+ account of the ending your session, how it ended in a storm; which storm,
+ by the time it arrives here, will be only half nature. I can't help it, I
+ won't hide. I often advised the dissolution of that Parliament, although I
+ did not think the scoundrels had so much courage; but they have it only in
+ the wrong, like a bully that will fight for a whore, and run away in an
+ army. I believe, by several things the Archbishop says, he is not very
+ well either with the Government or clergy.&mdash;See how luckily my paper
+ ends with a fortnight.&mdash;God Almighty bless and preserve dearest
+ little MD.&mdash;I suppose your Lord Lieutenant is now setting out for
+ England. I wonder the Bishop of Clogher does not write to me, or let me
+ know of his statues, and how he likes them: I will write to him again, as
+ soon as I have leisure. Farewell, dearest MD, and love Presto, who loves
+ MD infinitely above all earthly things, and who will.&mdash;My service to
+ Mrs. Stoyte and Catherine. I'm sitting in my bed, but will rise to seal
+ this. Morrow, dear rogues: Farewell again, dearest MD, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0038" id="link2H_4_0038">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 35.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, NOV. 17, 1711.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I put my last this evening in the post-office. I dined with Dr. Cockburn.
+ This being Queen Elizabeth's birthday, we have the D&mdash;&mdash; and all
+ to do among us. I just heard of the stir as my letter was sealed this
+ morning, and was so cross I would not open it to tell you. I have been
+ visiting Lady Oglethorpe(1) and Lady Worsley;(2) the latter is lately come
+ to town for the winter, and with child, and what care you? This is Queen
+ Elizabeth's birthday, usually kept in this town by apprentices, etc.; but
+ the Whigs designed a mighty procession by midnight, and had laid out a
+ thousand pounds to dress up the Pope, Devil, cardinals, Sacheverell, etc.,
+ and carry them with torches about, and burn them. They did it by
+ contribution. Garth gave five guineas; Dr. Garth I mean, if ever you heard
+ of him. But they were seized last night, by order from the Secretary: you
+ will have an account of it, for they bawl it about the streets already.(3)
+ They had some very foolish and mischievous designs; and it was thought
+ they would have put the rabble upon assaulting my Lord Treasurer's house
+ and the Secretary's, and other violences. The militia was raised to
+ prevent it, and now, I suppose, all will be quiet. The figures are now at
+ the Secretary's office at Whitehall. I design to see them if I can.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. I was this morning with Mr. Secretary, who just came from Hampton
+ Court. He was telling me more particulars about this business of burning
+ the Pope. It cost a great deal of money, and had it gone on, would have
+ cost three times as much; but the town is full of it, and half a dozen
+ Grub Street papers already. The Secretary and I dined at Brigadier
+ Britton's, but I left them at six, upon an appointment with some sober
+ company of men and ladies, to drink punch at Sir Andrew Fountaine's. We
+ were not very merry; and I don't love rack punch, I love it better with
+ brandy; are you of my opinion? Why then, twelvepenny weather; sirrahs, why
+ don't you play at shuttlecock? I have thought of it a hundred times;
+ faith, Presto will come over after Christmas, and will play with Stella
+ before the cold weather is gone. Do you read the Spectators? I never do;
+ they never come in my way; I go to no coffee-houses. They say abundance of
+ them are very pretty; they are going to be printed in small volumes; I'll
+ bring them over with me. I shall be out of my hurry in a week, and if
+ Leigh be not gone over, I will send you by him what I am now finishing. I
+ don't know where Leigh is; I have not seen him this good while, though he
+ promised to call: I shall send to him. The Queen comes to town on Thursday
+ for good and all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. I was this morning at Lord Dartmouth's office, and sent out for him
+ from the Committee of Council, about some business. I was asking him more
+ concerning this bustle about the figures in wax-work of the Pope, and
+ Devil, etc. He was not at leisure, or he would have seen them. I hear the
+ owners are so impudent, that they design to replevin them by law. I am
+ assured that the figure of the Devil is made as like Lord Treasurer as
+ they could. Why, I dined with a friend in St. James's Street. Lord
+ Treasurer, I am told, was abroad to-day; I will know to-morrow how he does
+ after it. The Duke of Marlborough is come, and was yesterday at Hampton
+ Court with the Queen; no, it was t'other day; no, it was yesterday; for
+ to-day I remember Mr. Secretary was going to see him, when I was there,
+ not at the Duke of Marlborough's, but at the Secretary's; the Duke is not
+ so fond of me. What care I? I won seven shillings to-night at picquet: I
+ play twice a year or so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. I have been so teased with Whiggish discourse by Mrs. Barton and Lady
+ Betty Germaine, never saw the like. They turn all this affair of the
+ Pope-burning into ridicule; and, indeed, they have made too great a
+ clutter about it, if they had no real reason to apprehend some tumults. I
+ dined with Lady Betty. I hear Prior's commission is passed to be
+ Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary for the peace; my Lord Privy
+ Seal, who you know is Bishop of Bristol, is the other; and Lord Strafford,
+ already Ambassador at The Hague, the third: I am forced to tell you,
+ ignorant sluts, who is who. I was punning scurvily with Sir Andrew
+ Fountaine and Lord Pembroke this evening: do you ever pun now? Sometimes
+ with the Dean, or Tom Leigh.(4) Prior puns very well. Odso, I must go see
+ His Excellency, 'tis a noble advancement: but they could do no less, after
+ sending him to France. Lord Strafford is as proud as Hell, and how he will
+ bear one of Prior's mean birth on an equal character with him, I know not.
+ And so I go to my business, and bid you good-night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21. I was this morning busy with my printer: I gave him the fifth
+ sheet,(5) and then I went and dined with him in the City, to correct
+ something, and alter, etc., and I walked home in the dusk, and the rain
+ overtook me: and I found a letter here from Mr. Lewis; well, and so I
+ opened it; and he says the peace is past danger, etc. Well, and so there
+ was another letter enclosed in his: well, and so I looked on the outside
+ of this t'other letter. Well, and so who do you think this t'other letter
+ was from? Well, and so I'll tell you; it was from little MD, N.23, 23, 23,
+ 23. I tell you it is no more, I have told you so before: but I just looked
+ again to satisfy you. Hie, Stella, you write like an emperor, a great deal
+ together; a very good hand, and but four false spellings in all. Shall I
+ send them to you? I am glad you did not take my correction ill. Well, but
+ I won't answer your letter now, sirrah saucyboxes, no, no; not yet; just a
+ month and three days from the last, which is just five weeks: you see it
+ comes just when I begin to grumble.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22. Morning. Tooke has just brought me Dingley's money. I will give you a
+ note for it at the end of this letter. There was half a crown for entering
+ the letter of attorney; but I swore to stop that. I'll spend your money
+ bravely here. Morrow, dear sirrahs.&mdash;At night. I dined to-day with
+ Sir Thomas Hanmer; his wife, the Duchess of Grafton,(6) dined with us: she
+ wears a great high head-dress, such as was in fashion fifteen years ago,
+ and looks like a mad woman in it; yet she has great remains of beauty. I
+ was this evening to see Lord Harley, and thought to have sat with Lord
+ Treasurer, but he was taken up with the Dutch Envoy and such folks; and I
+ would not stay. One particular in life here, different from what I have in
+ Dublin, is, that whenever I come home I expect to find some letter for me,
+ and seldom miss; and never any worth a farthing, but often to vex me. The
+ Queen does not come to town till Saturday. Prior is not yet declared; but
+ these Ministers being at Hampton Court, I know nothing; and if I write
+ news from common hands, it is always lies. You will think it affectation;
+ but nothing has vexed me more for some months past, than people I never
+ saw pretending to be acquainted with me, and yet speak ill of me too; at
+ least some of them. An old crooked Scotch countess, whom I never heard of
+ in my life, told the Duchess of Hamilton(7) t'other day that I often
+ visited her. People of worth never do that; so that a man only gets the
+ scandal of having scurvy acquaintance. Three ladies were railing against
+ me some time ago, and said they were very well acquainted with me; two of
+ which I had never heard of, and the third I had only seen twice where I
+ happened to visit. A man who has once seen me in a coffee-house will ask
+ me how I do, when he sees me talking at Court with a Minister of State;
+ who is sure to ask me how I came acquainted with that scoundrel. But come,
+ sirrahs, this is all stuff to you, so I'll say no more on this side the
+ paper, but turn over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23. My printer invited Mr. Lewis and me to dine at a tavern to-day, which
+ I have not done five times since I came to England; I never will call it
+ Britain, pray don't call it Britain. My week is not out, and one side of
+ this paper is out, and I have a letter to answer of MD's into the bargain:
+ must I write on the third side? faith, that will give you an ill habit. I
+ saw Leigh last night: he gives a terrible account of Sterne; he reckons he
+ is seduced by some wench; he is over head and ears in debt, and has pawned
+ several things. Leigh says he goes on Monday next for Ireland, but
+ believes Sterne will not go with him; Sterne has kept him these three
+ months. Leigh has got the apron and things, and promises to call for the
+ box at Chester; but I despair of it. Good-night, sirrahs; I have been late
+ abroad.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24. I have finished my pamphlet(8) to-day, which has cost me so much time
+ and trouble: it will be published in three or four days, when the
+ Parliament begins sitting. I suppose the Queen is come to town, but know
+ nothing, having been in the City finishing and correcting with the
+ printer. When I came home, I found letters on my table as usual, and one
+ from your mother, to tell me that you desire your writings and a picture
+ should be sent to me, to be sent over to you. I have just answered her
+ letter, and promised to take care of them if they be sent to me. She is at
+ Farnham: it is too late to send them by Leigh; besides, I will wait your
+ orders, Madam Stella. I am going to finish a letter to Lord Treasurer
+ about reforming our language;(9) but first I must put an end to a ballad;
+ and go you to your cards, sirrahs, this is card season.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25. I was early with the Secretary to-day, but he was gone to his
+ devotions, and to receive the sacrament: several rakes did the same; it
+ was not for piety, but employments; according to Act of Parliament. I
+ dined with Lady Mary Dudley;(10) and passed my time since insipidly, only
+ I was at Court at noon, and saw fifty acquaintance I had not met this long
+ time: that is the advantage of a Court, and I fancy I am better known than
+ any man that goes there. Sir John Walter's(11) quarrel with me has
+ entertained the town ever since; and yet we never had a word, only he
+ railed at me behind my back. The Parliament is again to be prorogued for
+ eight or nine days, for the Whigs are too strong in the House of Lords:
+ other reasons are pretended, but that is the truth. The prorogation is not
+ yet known, but will be to-morrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26. Mr. Lewis and I dined with a friend of his, and unexpectedly there
+ dined with us an Irish knight, one Sir John St. Leger,(12) who follows the
+ law here, but at a great distance: he was so pert, I was forced to take
+ him down more than once. I saw to-day the Pope, and Devil, and the other
+ figures of cardinals, etc., fifteen in all, which have made such a noise.
+ I have put an under-strapper upon writing a twopenny pamphlet(13) to give
+ an account of the whole design. My large pamphlet(14) will be published
+ to-morrow; copies are sent to the great men this night. Domville(15) is
+ come home from his travels; I am vexed at it: I have not seen him yet; I
+ design to present him to all the great men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27. Domville came to me this morning, and we dined at Pontack's, and were
+ all day together, till six this evening: he is perfectly as fine a
+ gentleman as I know; he set me down at Lord Treasurer's, with whom I
+ stayed about an hour, till Monsieur Buys, the Dutch Envoy, came to him
+ about business. My Lord Treasurer is pretty well, but stiff in the hips
+ with the remains of the rheumatism. I am to bring Domville to my Lord
+ Harley in a day or two. It was the dirtiest rainy day that ever I saw. The
+ pamphlet is published; Lord Treasurer had it by him on the table, and was
+ asking me about the mottoes in the title-page; he gave me one of them
+ himself.(16) I must send you the pamphlet, if I can.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28. Mrs. Van sent to me to dine with her to-day, because some ladies of my
+ acquaintance were to be there; and there I dined. I was this morning to
+ return Domville his visit, and went to visit Mrs. Masham, who was not
+ within. I am turned out of my lodging by my landlady: it seems her husband
+ and her son are coming home; but I have taken another lodging hard by, in
+ Leicester Fields. I presented Mr. Domville to Mr. Lewis and Mr. Prior this
+ morning. Prior and I are called the two Sosias,(17) in a Whig newspaper.
+ Sosias, can you read it? The pamphlet begins to make a noise: I was asked
+ by several whether I had seen it, and they advised me to read it, for it
+ was something very extraordinary. I shall be suspected; and it will have
+ several paltry answers. It must take its fate, as Savage(18) said of his
+ sermon that he preached at Farnham on Sir William Temple's death. Domville
+ saw Savage in Italy, and says he is a coxcomb, and half mad: he goes in
+ red, and with yellow waistcoats, and was at ceremony kneeling to the Pope
+ on a Palm Sunday, which is much more than kissing his toe; and I believe
+ it will ruin him here when 'tis told. I'll answer your letter in my new
+ lodgings: I have hardly room; I must borrow from the other side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29. New lodgings. My printer came this morning to tell me he must
+ immediately print a second edition,(19) and Lord Treasurer made one or two
+ small additions: they must work day and night to have it out on Saturday;
+ they sold a thousand in two days. Our Society met to-day; nine of us were
+ present: we dined at our brother Bathurst's.(20) We made several
+ regulations, and have chosen three new members, Lord Orrery,(21) Jack
+ Hill, who is Mrs. Masham's brother, he that lately miscarried in the
+ expedition to Quebec, and one Colonel Disney.(22)&mdash;We have taken a
+ room in a house near St. James's to meet in. I left them early about
+ correcting the pamphlet, etc., and am now got home, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30. This morning I carried Domville to see my Lord Harley, and I did some
+ business with Lord Treasurer, and have been all this afternoon with the
+ printer, adding something to the second edition. I dined with the printer:
+ the pamphlet makes a world of noise, and will do a great deal of good; it
+ tells abundance of most important facts which were not at all known. I'll
+ answer your letter to-morrow morning; or suppose I answer it just now,
+ though it is pretty late. Come then.&mdash;You say you are busy with
+ Parliaments, etc.; that's more than ever I will be when I come back; but
+ you will have none these two years. Lord Santry, etc., yes, I have had
+ enough on't.(23) I am glad Dilly is mended; does not he thank me for
+ showing him the Court and the great people's faces? He had his glass out
+ at the Queen and the rest. 'Tis right what Dilly says: I depend upon
+ nothing from my friends, but to go back as I came. Never fear Laracor,
+ 'twill mend with a peace, or surely they'll give me the Dublin parish.
+ Stella is in the right: the Bishop of Ossory(24) is the silliest,
+ best-natured wretch breathing, of as little consequence as an egg-shell.
+ Well, the spelling I have mentioned before; only the next time say AT
+ LEAST, and not AT LEST. Pox on your Newbury!(25) what can I do for him?
+ I'll give his case (I am glad it is not a woman's) to what members I know;
+ that's all I can do. Lord Treasurer's lameness goes off daily. Pray God
+ preserve poor good Mrs. Stoyte; she would be a great loss to us all: pray
+ give her my service, and tell her she has my heartiest prayers. I pity
+ poor Mrs. Manley; but I think the child is happy to die, considering how
+ little provision it would have had.&mdash;Poh, every pamphlet abuses me,
+ and for things that I never writ. Joe(26) should have written me thanks
+ for his two hundred pounds: I reckon he got it by my means; and I must
+ thank the Duke of Ormond, who I dare swear will say he did it on my
+ account. Are they golden pippins, those seven apples? We have had much
+ rain every day as well as you. 7 pounds, 17 shillings, 8 pence, old
+ blunderer, not 18 shillings: I have reckoned it eighteen times. Hawkshaw's
+ eight pounds is not reckoned and if it be secure, it may lie where it is,
+ unless they desire to pay it: so Parvisol may let it drop till further
+ orders; for I have put Mrs. Wesley's money into the Bank, and will pay her
+ with Hawkshaw's.&mdash;I mean that Hawkshaw's money goes for an addition
+ to MD, you know; but be good housewives. Bernage never comes now to see
+ me; he has no more to ask; but I hear he has been ill.&mdash;A pox on Mrs.
+ South's(27) affair; I can do nothing in it, but by way of assisting
+ anybody else that solicits it, by dropping a favourable word, if it comes
+ in my way. Tell Walls I do no more for anybody with my Lord Treasurer,
+ especially a thing of this kind. Tell him I have spent all my discretion,
+ and have no more to use.&mdash;And so I have answered your letter fully
+ and plainly.&mdash;And so I have got to the third side of my paper, which
+ is more than belongs to you, young women.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ It goes to-morrow,
+ To nobody's sorrow.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ You are silly, not I; I'm a poet, if I had but, etc.&mdash;Who's silly
+ now? rogues and lasses, tinderboxes and buzzards. O Lord, I am in a high
+ vein of silliness; methought I was speaking to dearest little MD face to
+ face. There; so, lads, enough for to-night; to cards with the blackguards.
+ Goodnight, my delight, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dec. 1. Pish, sirrahs, put a date always at the bottom of your letter, as
+ well as the top, that I may know when you send it; your last is of
+ November 3, yet I had others at the same time, written a fortnight after.
+ Whenever you would have any money, send me word three weeks before, and in
+ that time you will certainly have an answer, with a bill on Parvisol: pray
+ do this; for my head is full, and it will ease my memory. Why, I think I
+ quoted to you some of &mdash;&mdash;'s letter, so you may imagine how
+ witty the rest was; for it was all of a bunch, as Goodman Peesley(28)
+ says. Pray let us have no more bussiness, but busyness: the deuce take me
+ if I know how to spell it; your wrong spelling, Madam Stella, has put me
+ out: it does not look right; let me see, bussiness, busyness, business,
+ bisyness, bisness, bysness; faith, I know not which is right, I think the
+ second; I believe I never writ the word in my life before; yes, sure I
+ must, though; business, busyness, bisyness.&mdash;I have perplexed myself,
+ and can't do it. Prithee ask Walls. Business, I fancy that's right. Yes it
+ is; I looked in my own pamphlet, and found it twice in ten lines, to
+ convince you that I never writ it before. Oh, now I see it as plain as can
+ be; so yours is only an <i>s</i> too much. The Parliament will certainly
+ meet on Friday next: the Whigs will have a great majority in the House of
+ Lords, no care is taken to prevent it; there is too much neglect; they are
+ warned of it, and that signifies nothing: it was feared there would be
+ some peevish address from the Lords against a peace. 'Tis said about the
+ town that several of the Allies begin now to be content that a peace
+ should be treated. This is all the news I have. The Queen is pretty well:
+ and so now I bid poor dearest MD farewell till to-night; then I will talk
+ with them again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fifteen images that I saw were not worth forty pounds, so I stretched
+ a little when I said a thousand. The Grub Street account of that tumult is
+ published. The Devil is not like Lord Treasurer: they were all in your odd
+ antic masks, bought in common shops.(29) I fear Prior will not be one of
+ the plenipotentiaries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was looking over this letter, and find I make many mistakes of leaving
+ out words; so 'tis impossible to find my meaning, unless you be conjurers.
+ I will take more care for the future, and read over every day just what I
+ have written that day, which will take up no time to speak of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0039" id="link2H_4_0039">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 36.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, Dec. 1, 1711.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ My last was put in this evening. I intended to dine with Mr. Masham
+ to-day, and called at White's chocolate house to see if he was there. Lord
+ Wharton saw me at the door, and I saw him, but took no notice, and was
+ going away, but he came through the crowd, called after me, and asked me
+ how I did, etc. This was pretty; and I believe he wished every word he
+ spoke was a halter to hang me. Masham did not dine at home, so I ate with
+ a friend in the neighbourhood. The printer has not sent me the second
+ edition; I know not the reason, for it certainly came out to-day; perhaps
+ they are glutted with it already. I found a letter from Lord Harley on my
+ table, to tell me that his father desires I would make two small
+ alterations. I am going to be busy, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. Morning. See the blunder; I was making it the 37th day of the month,
+ from the number above. Well, but I am staying here for old Frowde, who
+ appointed to call this morning: I am ready dressed to go to church: I
+ suppose he dare not stir out but on Sundays.(1) The printer called early
+ this morning, told me the second edition went off yesterday in five hours,
+ and he must have a third ready to-morrow, for they might have sold half
+ another: his men are all at work with it, though it be Sunday. This old
+ fool will not come, and I shall miss church. Morrow, sirrahs.&mdash;At
+ night. I was at Court to-day: the Queen is well, and walked through part
+ of the rooms. I dined with the Secretary, and despatched some business. He
+ tells me the Dutch Envoy designs to complain of that pamphlet. The noise
+ it makes is extraordinary. It is fit it should answer the pains I have
+ been at about it. I suppose it will be printed in Ireland. Some lay it to
+ Prior, others to Mr. Secretary St. John, but I am always the first they
+ lay everything to. I'll go sleep, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. I have ordered Patrick not to let any odd fellow come up to me; and a
+ fellow would needs speak with me from Sir George Pretyman.(2) I had never
+ heard of him, and would not see the messenger: but at last it proved that
+ this Sir George has sold his estate, and is a beggar. Smithers, the
+ Farnham carrier, brought me this morning a letter from your mother, with
+ three papers enclosed of Lady Giffard's writing; one owning some exchequer
+ business of 100 pounds to be Stella's;(3) another for 100 pounds that she
+ has of yours, which I made over to you for Mariston; and a third for 300
+ pounds; the last is on stamped paper. I think they had better lie in
+ England in some good hand till Lady Giffard dies; and I will think of some
+ such hand before I come over. I was asking Smithers about all the people
+ of Farnham. Mrs. White(4) has left off dressing, is troubled with lameness
+ and swelled legs, and seldom stirs out; but her old hang-dog husband as
+ hearty as ever. I was this morning with Lord Treasurer, about something he
+ would have altered in the pamphlet;(5) but it can't be till the fourth
+ edition, which I believe will be soon; for I dined with the printer, and
+ he tells me they have sold off half the third. Mrs. Perceval(6) and her
+ daughter have been in town these three weeks, which I never heard till
+ to-day; and Mrs. Wesley(7) is come to town too, to consult Dr. Radcliffe.
+ The Whigs are resolved to bring that pamphlet into the House of Lords to
+ have it condemned, so I hear. But the printer will stand to it, and not
+ own the author; he must say he had it from the penny-post. Some people
+ talk as if the House of Lords would do some peevish thing, for the Whigs
+ are now a great majority in it; our Ministers are too negligent of such
+ things: I have never slipped giving them warning; some of them are
+ sensible of it; but Lord Treasurer stands too much upon his own legs. I
+ fancy his good fortune will bear him out in everything; but in reason I
+ should think this Ministry to stand very unsteady; if they can carry a
+ peace, they may hold; I believe not else.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. Mr. Secretary sent to me to-day to dine with him alone; but we had two
+ more with us, which hindered me doing some business. I was this morning
+ with young Harcourt, secretary to our Society, to take a room for our
+ weekly meetings; and the fellow asked us five guineas a week only to have
+ leave to dine once a week; was not that pretty? so we broke off with him,
+ and are to dine next Thursday at Harcourt's (he is Lord Keeper's son).
+ They have sold off above half the third edition, and answers are coming
+ out: the Dutch Envoy refused dining with Dr. Davenant,(8) because he was
+ suspected to write it: I have made some alterations in every edition, and
+ it has cost me more trouble, for the time, since the printing, than
+ before. 'Tis sent over to Ireland, and I suppose you will have it
+ reprinted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. They are now printing the fourth edition, which is reckoned very
+ extraordinary, considering 'tis a dear twelvepenny book, and not bought up
+ in numbers by the party to give away, as the Whigs do, but purely upon its
+ own strength. I have got an under spur-leather to write an Examiner
+ again,(9) and the Secretary and I will now and then send hints; but we
+ would have it a little upon the Grub Street, to be a match for their
+ writers. I dined with Lord Treasurer to-day at five: he dined by himself
+ after his family, and drinks no claret yet, for fear of his rheumatism, of
+ which he is almost well. He was very pleasant, as he is always: yet I
+ fancied he was a little touched with the present posture of affairs. The
+ Elector of Hanover's Minister here has given in a violent memorial against
+ the peace, and caused it to be printed. The Whig lords are doing their
+ utmost for a majority against Friday, and design, if they can, to address
+ the Queen against the peace. Lord Nottingham,(10) a famous Tory and
+ speech-maker, is gone over to the Whig side: they toast him daily, and
+ Lord Wharton says, It is Dismal (so they call him from his looks) will
+ save England at last. Lord Treasurer was hinting as if he wished a ballad
+ was made on him, and I will get up one against to-morrow.(11) He gave me a
+ scurrilous printed paper of bad verses on himself, under the name of the
+ English Catiline, and made me read them to the company. It was his
+ birthday, which he would not tell us, but Lord Harley whispered it to me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. I was this morning making the ballad, two degrees above Grub Street: at
+ noon I paid a visit to Mrs. Masham, and then went to dine with our
+ Society. Poor Lord Keeper dined below stairs, I suppose, on a bit of
+ mutton. We chose two members: we were eleven met, the greatest meeting we
+ ever had: I am next week to introduce Lord Orrery. The printer came before
+ we parted, and brought the ballad, which made them laugh very heartily a
+ dozen times. He is going to print the pamphlet(12) in small, a fifth
+ edition, to be taken off by friends, and sent into the country. A sixpenny
+ answer is come out, good for nothing, but guessing me, among others, for
+ the author. To-morrow is the fatal day for the Parliament meeting, and we
+ are full of hopes and fears. We reckon we have a majority of ten on our
+ side in the House of Lords; yet I observed Mrs. Masham a little uneasy:
+ she assures me the Queen is stout. The Duke of Marlborough has not seen
+ the Queen for some days past; Mrs. Masham is glad of it, because she says
+ he tells a hundred lies to his friends of what she says to him: he is one
+ day humble, and the next day on the high ropes. The Duke of Ormond, they
+ say, will be in town to-night by twelve.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. This being the day the Parliament was to meet, and the great question
+ to be determined, I went with Dr. Freind to dine in the City, on purpose
+ to be out of the way, and we sent our printer to see what was our fate;
+ but he gave us a most melancholy account of things. The Earl of Nottingham
+ began, and spoke against a peace, and desired that in their address they
+ might put in a clause to advise the Queen not to make a peace without
+ Spain; which was debated, and carried by the Whigs by about six voices:
+ and this has happened entirely by my Lord Treasurer's neglect, who did not
+ take timely care to make up all his strength, although every one of us
+ gave him caution enough. Nottingham has certainly been bribed. The
+ question is yet only carried in the Committee of the whole House, and we
+ hope when it is reported to the House to-morrow, we shall have a majority,
+ by some Scotch lords coming to town. However, it is a mighty blow and loss
+ of reputation to Lord Treasurer, and may end in his ruin. I hear the thing
+ only as the printer brought it, who was at the debate; but how the
+ Ministry take it, or what their hopes and fears are, I cannot tell until I
+ see them. I shall be early with the Secretary to-morrow, and then I will
+ tell you more, and shall write a full account to the Bishop of Clogher
+ to-morrow, and to the Archbishop of Dublin, if I have time. I am horribly
+ down at present. I long to know how Lord Treasurer bears this, and what
+ remedy he has. The Duke of Ormond came this day to town, and was there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. I was early this morning with the Secretary, and talked over this
+ matter. He hoped that when it was reported this day in the House of Lords,
+ they would disagree with their Committee, and so the matter would go off,
+ only with a little loss of reputation to the Lord Treasurer. I dined with
+ Mr. Cockburn, and after, a Scotch member came in, and told us that the
+ clause was carried against the Court in the House of Lords almost two to
+ one. I went immediately to Mrs. Masham, and meeting Dr. Arbuthnot (the
+ Queen's favourite physician), we went together. She was just come from
+ waiting at the Queen's dinner, and going to her own. She had heard nothing
+ of the thing being gone against us. It seems Lord Treasurer had been so
+ negligent that he was with the Queen while the question was put in the
+ House: I immediately told Mrs. Masham that either she and Lord Treasurer
+ had joined with the Queen to betray us, or that they two were betrayed by
+ the Queen: she protested solemnly it was not the former, and I believed
+ her; but she gave me some lights to suspect the Queen is changed. For
+ yesterday, when the Queen was going from the House, where she sat to hear
+ the debate, the Duke of Shrewsbury, Lord Chamberlain, asked her whether he
+ or the Great Chamberlain Lindsey(13) ought to lead her out; she answered
+ short, "Neither of you," and gave her hand to the Duke of Somerset, who
+ was louder than any in the House for the clause against peace. She gave me
+ one or two more instances of this sort, which convince me that the Queen
+ is false, or at least very much wavering. Mr. Masham begged us to stay,
+ because Lord Treasurer would call, and we were resolved to fall on him
+ about his negligence in securing a majority. He came, and appeared in good
+ humour as usual, but I thought his countenance was much cast down. I
+ rallied him, and desired him to give me his staff, which he did: I told
+ him, if he would secure it me a week, I would set all right: he asked how;
+ I said I would immediately turn Lord Marlborough, his two daughters,(14)
+ the Duke and Duchess of Somerset, and Lord Cholmondeley,(15) out of all
+ their employments; and I believe he had not a friend but was of my
+ opinion. Arbuthnot asked how he came not to secure a majority. He could
+ answer nothing but that he could not help it, if people would lie and
+ forswear. A poor answer for a great Minister. There fell from him a
+ Scripture expression, that "the hearts of kings are unsearchable."(16) I
+ told him it was what I feared, and was from him the worst news he could
+ tell me. I begged him to know what he had to trust to: he stuck a little;
+ but at last bid me not fear, for all would be well yet. We would fain have
+ had him eat a bit where he was, but he would go home, it was past six: he
+ made me go home with him. There we found his brother and Mr. Secretary. He
+ made his son take a list of all in the House of Commons who had places,
+ and yet voted against the Court, in such a manner as if they should lose
+ their places: I doubt he is not able to compass it. Lord Keeper came in an
+ hour, and they were going upon business. So I left him, and returned to
+ Mrs. Masham; but she had company with her, and I would not stay.&mdash;This
+ is a long journal, and of a day that may produce great alterations, and
+ hazard the ruin of England. The Whigs are all in triumph; they foretold
+ how all this would be, but we thought it boasting. Nay, they said the
+ Parliament should be dissolved before Christmas, and perhaps it may: this
+ is all your d&mdash;&mdash;d Duchess of Somerset's doings. I warned them
+ of it nine months ago, and a hundred times since: the Secretary always
+ dreaded it. I told Lord Treasurer I should have the advantage of him; for
+ he would lose his head, and I should only be hanged, and so carry my body
+ entire to the grave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. I was this morning with Mr. Secretary: we are both of opinion that the
+ Queen is false. I told him what I heard, and he confirmed it by other
+ circumstances. I then went to my friend Lewis, who had sent to see me. He
+ talks of nothing but retiring to his estate in Wales. He gave me reasons
+ to believe the whole matter is settled between the Queen and the Whigs; he
+ hears that Lord Somers is to be Treasurer, and believes that, sooner than
+ turn out the Duchess of Somerset, she will dissolve the Parliament, and
+ get a Whiggish one, which may be done by managing elections. Things are
+ now in the crisis, and a day or two will determine. I have desired him to
+ engage Lord Treasurer that as soon as he finds the change is resolved on,
+ he will send me abroad as Queen's Secretary somewhere or other, where I
+ may remain till the new Ministers recall me; and then I will be sick for
+ five or six months, till the storm has spent itself. I hope he will grant
+ me this; for I should hardly trust myself to the mercy of my enemies while
+ their anger is fresh. I dined to-day with the Secretary, who affects
+ mirth, and seems to hope all will yet be well. I took him aside after
+ dinner, told him how I had served them, and had asked no reward, but
+ thought I might ask security; and then desired the same thing of him, to
+ send me abroad before a change. He embraced me, and swore he would take
+ the same care of me as himself, etc., but bid me have courage, for that in
+ two days my Lord Treasurer's wisdom would appear greater than ever; that
+ he suffered all that had happened on purpose, and had taken measures to
+ turn it to advantage. I said, "God send it"; but I do not believe a
+ syllable; and, as far as I can judge, the game is lost. I shall know more
+ soon, and my letters will at least be a good history to show you the steps
+ of this change.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. I was this morning with Lewis, who thinks they will let the Parliament
+ sit till they have given the money, and then dissolve them in spring, and
+ break the Ministry. He spoke to Lord Treasurer about what I desired him.
+ My lord desired him with great earnestness to assure me that all would be
+ well, and that I should fear nothing. I dined in the City with a friend.
+ This day the Commons went to the Queen with their address, and all the
+ Lords who were for the peace went with them, to show their zeal. I have
+ now some further conviction that the Queen is false, and it begins to be
+ known.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. I went between two and three to see Mrs. Masham; while I was there she
+ went to her bed-chamber to try a petticoat. Lord Treasurer came in to see
+ her, and seeing me in the outer room, fell a rallying me: says he, "You
+ had better keep company with me, than with such a fellow as Lewis, who has
+ not the soul of a chicken, nor the heart of a mite." Then he went in to
+ Mrs. Masham, and as he came back desired her leave to let me go home with
+ him to dinner. He asked whether I was not afraid to be seen with him. I
+ said I never valued my Lord Treasurer in my life, and therefore should
+ have always the same esteem for Mr. Harley and Lord Oxford. He seemed to
+ talk confidently, as if he reckoned that all this would turn to advantage.
+ I could not forbear hinting that he was not sure of the Queen, and that
+ those scoundrel, starving lords would never have dared to vote against the
+ Court, if Somerset had not assured them that it would please the Queen. He
+ said that was true, and Somerset did so. I stayed till six; then De Buys,
+ the Dutch Envoy, came to him, and I left him. Prior was with us a while
+ after dinner. I see him and all of them cast down, though they make the
+ best of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. Ford is come to town; I saw him last night: he is in no fear, but
+ sanguine, although I have told him the state of things. This change so
+ resembles the last, that I wonder they do not observe it. The Secretary
+ sent for me yesterday to dine with him, but I was abroad; I hope he had
+ something to say to me. This is morning, and I write in bed. I am going to
+ the Duke of Ormond, whom I have not yet seen. Morrow, sirrahs.&mdash;At
+ night. I was to see the Duke of Ormond this morning: he asked me two or
+ three questions after his civil way, and they related to Ireland: at last
+ I told him that, from the time I had seen him, I never once thought of
+ Irish affairs. He whispered me that he hoped I had done some good things
+ here: I said, if everybody else had done half as much, we should not be as
+ we are: then we went aside, and talked over affairs. I told him how all
+ things stood, and advised him what was to be done. I then went and sat an
+ hour with the Duchess; then as long with Lady Oglethorpe,(17) who is so
+ cunning a devil that I believe she could yet find a remedy, if they would
+ take her advice. I dined with a friend at Court.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. I was this morning with the Secretary: he will needs pretend to talk
+ as if things would be well: "Will you believe it," said he, "if you see
+ these people turned out?" I said, yes, if I saw the Duke and Duchess of
+ Somerset out: he swore if they were not, he would give up his place. Our
+ Society dined to-day at Sir William Wyndham's; we were thirteen present.
+ Lord Orrery and two other members were introduced: I left them at seven. I
+ forgot to tell you that the printer told me yesterday that Morphew, the
+ publisher, was sent for by that Lord Chief-Justice, who was a manager
+ against Sacheverell; he showed him two or three papers and pamphlets;
+ among the rest mine of the Conduct of the Allies, threatened him, asked
+ who was the author, and has bound him over to appear next term. He would
+ not have the impudence to do this, if he did not foresee what was coming
+ at Court.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. Lord Shelburne was with me this morning, to be informed of the state
+ of affairs, and desired I would answer all his objections against a peace,
+ which was soon done, for he would not give me room to put in a word. He is
+ a man of good sense enough; but argues so violently, that he will some day
+ or other put himself into a consumption. He desires that he may not be
+ denied when he comes to see me, which I promised, but will not perform.
+ Leigh and Sterne set out for Ireland on Monday se'nnight: I suppose they
+ will be with you long before this.&mdash;I was to-night drinking very good
+ wine in scurvy company, at least some of them; I was drawn in, but will be
+ more cautious for the future; 'tis late, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. Morning. They say the Occasional Bill(19) is brought to-day into the
+ House of Lords; but I know not. I will now put an end to my letter, and
+ give it into the post-house myself. This will be a memorable letter, and I
+ shall sigh to see it some years hence. Here are the first steps toward the
+ ruin of an excellent Ministry; for I look upon them as certainly ruined;
+ and God knows what may be the consequences.&mdash;I now bid my dearest MD
+ farewell; for company is coming, and I must be at Lord Dartmouth's office
+ by noon. Farewell, dearest MD; I wish you a merry Christmas; I believe you
+ will have this about that time. Love Presto, who loves MD above all things
+ a thousand times. Farewell again, dearest MD, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0040" id="link2H_4_0040">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 37.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, Dec. 15, 1711.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I put in my letter this evening myself. I was to-day inquiring at the
+ Secretary's office of Mr. Lewis how things went: I there met Prior, who
+ told me he gave all for gone, etc., and was of opinion the whole Ministry
+ would give up their places next week: Lewis thinks they will not till
+ spring, when the session is over; both of them entirely despair. I went to
+ see Mrs. Masham, who invited me to dinner; but I was engaged to Lewis. At
+ four I went to Masham's. He came and whispered me that he had it from a
+ very good hand that all would be well, and I found them both very
+ cheerful. The company was going to the opera, but desired I would come and
+ sup with them. I did so at ten, and Lord Treasurer was there, and sat with
+ us till past twelve, and was more cheerful than I have seen him these ten
+ days. Mrs. Masham told me he was mightily cast down some days ago, and he
+ could not indeed hide it from me. Arbuthnot is in good hopes that the
+ Queen has not betrayed us, but only has been frightened, and flattered,
+ etc. But I cannot yet be of his opinion, whether my reasons are better, or
+ that my fears are greater. I do resolve, if they give up, or are turned
+ out soon, to retire for some months, and I have pitched upon the place
+ already: but I will take methods for hearing from MD, and writing to them.
+ But I would be out of the way upon the first of the ferment; for they lay
+ all things on me, even some I have never read.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. I took courage to-day, and went to Court with a very cheerful
+ countenance. It was mightily crowded; both parties coming to observe each
+ other's faces. I have avoided Lord Halifax's bow till he forced it on me;
+ but we did not talk together. I could not make less than fourscore bows,
+ of which about twenty might be to Whigs. The Duke of Somerset is gone to
+ Petworth, and, I hear, the Duchess too, of which I shall be very glad.
+ Prince Eugene,(1) who was expected here some days ago, we are now told,
+ will not come at all. The Whigs designed to have met him with forty
+ thousand horse. Lord Treasurer told me some days ago of his discourse with
+ the Emperor's Resident, that puppy Hoffman, about Prince Eugene's coming;
+ by which I found my lord would hinder it, if he could; and we shall be all
+ glad if he does not come, and think it a good point gained. Sir Andrew
+ Fountaine, Ford, and I dined to-day with Mrs. Van, by invitation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. I have mistaken the day of the month, and been forced to mend it
+ thrice. I dined to-day with Mr. Masham and his lady, by invitation. Lord
+ Treasurer was to be there, but came not. It was to entertain Buys, the
+ Dutch Envoy, who speaks English well enough: he was plaguily politic,
+ telling a thousand lies, of which none passed upon any of us. We are still
+ in the condition of suspense, and I think have little hopes. The Duchess
+ of Somerset is not gone to Petworth; only the Duke, and that is a poor
+ sacrifice. I believe the Queen certainly designs to change the Ministry,
+ but perhaps may put it off till the session is over: and I think they had
+ better give up now, if she will not deal openly; and then they need not
+ answer for the consequences of a peace, when it is in other hands, and may
+ yet be broken. They say my Lord Privy Seal sets out for Holland this week:
+ so the peace goes on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. It has rained hard from morning till night, and cost me three
+ shillings in coach-hire. We have had abundance of wet weather. I dined in
+ the City, and was with the printer, who has now a fifth edition of the
+ Conduct, etc.: it is in small, and sold for sixpence; they have printed as
+ many as three editions, because they are to be sent in numbers into the
+ country by great men, etc., who subscribe for hundreds. It has been sent a
+ fortnight ago to Ireland: I suppose you will print it there. The Tory
+ Lords and Commons in Parliament argue all from it; and all agree that
+ never anything of that kind was of so great consequence, or made so many
+ converts. By the time I have sent this letter, I expect to hear from
+ little MD: it will be a month, two days hence, since I had your last, and
+ I will allow ten days for accidents. I cannot get rid of the leavings of a
+ cold I got a month ago, or else it is a new one. I have been writing
+ letters all this evening till I am weary, and I am sending out another
+ little thing, which I hope to finish this week, and design to send to the
+ printer in an unknown hand. There was printed a Grub Street speech of Lord
+ Nottingham;(2) and he was such an owl to complain of it in the House of
+ Lords, who have taken up the printer for it. I heard at Court that
+ Walpole(3) (a great Whig member) said that I and my whimsical Club writ it
+ at one of our meetings, and that I should pay for it. He will find he
+ lies: and I shall let him know by a third hand my thoughts of him. He is
+ to be Secretary of State, if the Ministry changes; but he has lately had a
+ bribe proved against him in Parliament, while he was Secretary at War. He
+ is one of the Whigs' chief speakers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. Sad dismal weather. I went to the Secretary's office, and Lewis made
+ me dine with him. I intended to have dined with Lord Treasurer. I have not
+ seen the Secretary this week. Things do not mend at all. Lord Dartmouth
+ despairs, and is for giving up; Lewis is of the same mind; but Lord
+ Treasurer only says, "Poh, poh, all will be well." I am come home early to
+ finish something I am doing; but I find I want heart and humour, and would
+ read any idle book that came in my way. I have just sent away a penny
+ paper to make a little mischief. Patrick is gone to the burial of an Irish
+ footman, who was Dr. King's(4) servant; he died of a consumption, a fit
+ death for a poor starving wit's footman. The Irish servants always club to
+ bury a countryman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. I was with the Secretary this morning, and, for aught I can see, we
+ shall have a languishing death: I can know nothing, nor themselves
+ neither. I dined, you know, with our Society, and that odious Secretary
+ would make me President next week; so I must entertain them this day
+ se'nnight at the Thatched House Tavern,(5) where we dined to-day: it will
+ cost me five or six pounds; yet the Secretary says he will give me wine. I
+ found a letter when I came home from the Bishop of Clogher.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21. This is the first time I ever got a new cold before the old one was
+ going: it came yesterday, and appeared in all due forms, eyes and nose
+ running, etc., and is now very bad; and I cannot tell how I got it. Sir
+ Andrew Fountaine and I were invited to dine with Mrs. Van. I was this
+ morning with the Duke of Ormond; and neither he nor I can think of
+ anything to comfort us in present affairs. We must certainly fall, if the
+ Duchess of Somerset be not turned out; and nobody believes the Queen will
+ ever part with her. The Duke and I were settling when Mr. Secretary and I
+ should dine with him, and he fixes upon Tuesday; and when I came away I
+ remembered it was Christmas Day. I was to see Lady &mdash;&mdash;, who is
+ just up after lying-in; and the ugliest sight I have seen, pale, dead, old
+ and yellow, for want of her paint. She has turned my stomach. But she will
+ soon be painted, and a beauty again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22. I find myself disordered with a pain all round the small of my back,
+ which I imputed to champagne I had drunk; but find it to have been only my
+ new cold. It was a fine frosty day, and I resolved to walk into the City.
+ I called at Lord Treasurer's at eleven, and stayed some time with him.&mdash;He
+ showed me a letter from a great Presbyterian parson(6) to him, complaining
+ how their friends had betrayed them by passing this Conformity Bill; and
+ he showed me the answer he had written, which his friends would not let
+ him send; but was a very good one. He is very cheerful; but gives one no
+ hopes, nor has any to give. I went into the City, and there I dined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23. Morning. As I was dressing to go to church, a friend that was to see
+ me advised me not to stir out; so I shall keep at home to-day, and only
+ eat some broth, if I can get it. It is a terrible cold frost, and snow
+ fell yesterday, which still remains: look there, you may see it from the
+ penthouses. The Lords made yesterday two or three votes about peace, and
+ Hanover, of a very angry kind to vex the Ministry, and they will meet
+ sooner by a fortnight than the Commons; and they say, are preparing some
+ knocking addresses. Morrow, sirrahs. I'll sit at home, and when I go to
+ bed I will tell you how I am.&mdash;I have sat at home all day, and eaten
+ only a mess of broth and a roll. I have written a Prophecy,(7) which I
+ design to print; I did it to-day, and some other verses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24. I went into the City to-day in a coach, and dined there. My cold is
+ going. It is now bitter hard frost, and has been so these three or four
+ days. My Prophecy is printed, and will be published after Christmas Day; I
+ like it mightily: I don't know how it will pass. You will never understand
+ it at your distance, without help. I believe everybody will guess it to be
+ mine, because it is somewhat in the same manner with that of "Merlin"(8)
+ in the Miscellanies. My Lord Privy Seal set out this day for Holland:
+ he'll have a cold journey. I gave Patrick half a crown for his Christmas
+ box, on condition he would be good, and he came home drunk at midnight. I
+ have taken a memorandum of it, because I never design to give him a groat
+ more. 'Tis cruel cold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25. I wish MD a merry Christmas, and many a one; but mine is melancholy: I
+ durst not go to church to-day, finding myself a little out of order, and
+ it snowing prodigiously, and freezing. At noon I went to Mrs. Van, who had
+ this week engaged me to dine there to-day: and there I received the news
+ that poor Mrs. Long(9) died at Lynn in Norfolk on Saturday last, at four
+ in the morning: she was sick but four hours. We suppose it was the asthma,
+ which she was subject to as well as the dropsy, as she sent me word in her
+ last letter, written about five weeks ago; but then said she was
+ recovered. I never was more afflicted at any death. The poor creature had
+ retired to Lynn two years ago, to live cheap, and pay her debts. In her
+ last letter she told me she hoped to be easy by Christmas; and she kept
+ her word, although she meant it otherwise. She had all sorts of amiable
+ qualities, and no ill ones, but the indiscretion of too much neglecting
+ her own affairs. She had two thousand pounds left her by an old
+ grandmother,(10) with which she intended to pay her debts, and live on an
+ annuity she had of one hundred pounds a year, and Newburg House, which
+ would be about sixty pounds more. That odious grandmother living so long,
+ forced her to retire; for the two thousand pounds was settled on her after
+ the old woman's death, yet her brute of a brother, Sir James Long,(11)
+ would not advance it for her; else she might have paid her debts, and
+ continued here, and lived still: I believe melancholy helped her on to her
+ grave. I have ordered a paragraph to be put in the Postboy,(12) giving an
+ account of her death, and making honourable mention of her; which is all I
+ can do to serve her memory: but one reason was spite; for her brother
+ would fain have her death a secret, to save the charge of bringing her up
+ here to bury her, or going into mourning. Pardon all this, for the sake of
+ a poor creature I had so much friendship for.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26. I went to Mr. Secretary this morning, and he would have me dine with
+ him. I called at noon at Mrs. Masham's, who desired me not to let the
+ Prophecy be published, for fear of angering the Queen about the Duchess of
+ Somerset; so I writ to the printer to stop them. They have been printed
+ and given about, but not sold. I saw Lord Treasurer there, who had been
+ two hours with the Queen; and Mrs. Masham is in hopes things will do well
+ again. I went at night again, and supped at Mr. Masham's, and Lord
+ Treasurer sat with us till one o'clock. So 'tis late, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27. I entertained our Society at the Thatched House Tavern to-day at
+ dinner; but brother Bathurst sent for wine, the house affording none. The
+ printer had not received my letter, and so he brought up dozens apiece of
+ the Prophecy; but I ordered him to part with no more. 'Tis an admirable
+ good one, and people are mad for it. The frost still continues violently
+ cold. Mrs. Masham invited me to come to-night and play at cards; but our
+ Society did not part till nine. But I supped with Mrs. Hill, her sister,
+ and there was Mrs. Masham and Lord Treasurer, and we stayed till twelve.
+ He is endeavouring to get a majority against next Wednesday, when the
+ House of Lords is to meet, and the Whigs intend to make some violent
+ addresses against a peace, if not prevented. God knows what will become of
+ us.&mdash;It is still prodigiously cold; but so I told you already. We
+ have eggs on the spit, I wish they may not be addled. When I came home
+ tonight I found, forsooth, a letter from MD, N.24, 24, 24, 24; there, do
+ you know the numbers now? and at the same time one from Joe,(13) full of
+ thanks: let him know I have received it, and am glad of his success, but
+ won't put him to the charge of a letter. I had a letter some time ago from
+ Mr. Warburton,(14) and I beg one of you will copy out what I shall tell
+ you, and send it by some opportunity to Warburton. 'Tis as follows: The
+ Doctor has received Mr. Warburton's letter, and desires he will let the
+ Doctor know where(15) that accident he mentions is like soon to happen,
+ and he will do what he can in it.&mdash;And pray, madam, let them know
+ that I do this to save myself the trouble, and them the expense of a
+ letter. And I think that this is enough for one that comes home at twelve
+ from a Lord Treasurer and Mrs. Masham. Oh, I could tell you ten thousand
+ things of our mad politics, upon what small circumstances great affairs
+ have turned. But I will go rest my busy head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28. I was this morning with brother Bathurst to see the Duke of Ormond. We
+ have given his Grace some hopes to be one of our Society. The Secretary
+ and I and Bathurst are to dine with him on Sunday next. The Duke is not in
+ much hopes, but has been very busy in endeavouring to bring over some
+ lords against next Wednesday. The Duchess caught me as I was going out;
+ she is sadly in fear about things, and blames me for not mending them by
+ my credit with Lord Treasurer; and I blame her. She met me in the street
+ at noon, and engaged me to dine with her, which I did; and we talked an
+ hour after dinner in her closet. If we miscarry on Wednesday, I believe it
+ will be by some strange sort of neglect. They talk of making eight new
+ lords by calling up some peers' eldest sons; but they delay strangely. I
+ saw Judge Coote(16) to-day at the Duke of Ormond's: he desires to come and
+ see me, to justify his principles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29. Morning. This goes to-day. I will not answer yours, your 24th, till
+ next, which shall begin to-night, as usual. Lord Shelburne has sent to
+ invite me to dinner, but I am engaged with Lewis at Ned Southwell's. Lord
+ Northampton and Lord Aylesbury's sons(17) are both made peers; but we
+ shall want more. I write this post to your Dean. I owe the Archbishop a
+ letter this long time. All people that come from Ireland complain of him,
+ and scold me for protecting him. Pray, Madam Dingley, let me know what
+ Presto has received for this year, or whether anything is due to him for
+ last: I cannot look over your former letters now. As for Dingley's own
+ account of her exchequer money, I will give it on t'other side. Farewell,
+ my own dearest MD, and love Presto; and God ever bless dearest MD, etc.
+ etc. I wish you many happy Christmases and new years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have owned to the Dean a letter I just had from you, but that I had not
+ one this great while before.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+DINGLEY'S ACCOUNT
+
+ Received of Mr. Tooke.. 6 17 6
+ Deducted for entering the letter of attorney. 0 2 6
+ For the three half-crowns it used to cost you, I don't
+ know why nor wherefore.. 0 7 6
+ For exchange to Ireland.. 0 10 0
+ Forcoach-hire.. 0 2 6
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
+ In all, just 8 0 0
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ So there's your money, and we are both even: for I'll pay you no more than
+ that eight pounds Irish, and pray be satisfied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Churchwarden's accounts, boys.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Saturday night. I have broke open my letter, and tore it into the bargain,
+ to let you know that we are all safe: the Queen has made no less than
+ twelve lords,(18) to have a majority; nine new ones, the other three
+ peers' sons; and has turned out the Duke of Somerset. She is awaked at
+ last, and so is Lord Treasurer: I want nothing now but to see the Duchess
+ out. But we shall do without her. We are all extremely happy. Give me joy,
+ sirrahs. This is written in a coffee-house. Three of the new lords are of
+ our Society.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0041" id="link2H_4_0041">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 38.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, Dec. 29, 1711.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I put my letter in this evening, after coming from dinner at Ned
+ Southwell's, where I drank very good Irish wine, and we are in great joy
+ at this happy turn of affairs. The Queen has been at last persuaded to her
+ own interest and security, and I freely think she must have made both
+ herself and kingdom very unhappy, if she had done otherwise. It is still a
+ mighty secret that Masham is to be one of the new lords; they say he does
+ not yet know it himself; but the Queen is to surprise him with it. Mr.
+ Secretary will be a lord at the end of the session; but they want him
+ still in Parliament. After all, it is a strange unhappy necessity of
+ making so many peers together; but the Queen has drawn it upon herself, by
+ her confounded trimming and moderation. Three, as I told you, are of our
+ Society.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30. I writ the Dean and you a lie yesterday; for the Duke of Somerset is
+ not yet turned out. I was to-day at Court, and resolved to be very civil
+ to the Whigs; but saw few there. When I was in the bed-chamber talking to
+ Lord Rochester, he went up to Lady Burlington,(1) who asked him who I was;
+ and Lady Sunderland and she whispered about me: I desired Lord Rochester
+ to tell Lady Sunderland I doubted she was not as much in love with me as I
+ was with her; but he would not deliver my message. The Duchess of
+ Shrewsbury came running up to me, and clapped her fan up to hide us from
+ the company, and we gave one another joy of this change; but sighed when
+ we reflected on the Somerset family not being out. The Secretary and I,
+ and brother Bathurst, and Lord Windsor, dined with the Duke of Ormond.
+ Bathurst and Windsor(2) are to be two of the new lords. I desired my Lord
+ Radnor's brother,(3) at Court to-day, to let my lord know I would call on
+ him at six, which I did, and was arguing with him three hours to bring him
+ over to us, and I spoke so closely that I believe he will be tractable;
+ but he is a scoundrel, and though I said I only talked for my love to him,
+ I told a lie; for I did not care if he were hanged: but everyone gained
+ over is of consequence. The Duke of Marlborough was at Court today, and
+ nobody hardly took notice of him. Masham's being a lord begins to take
+ wind: nothing at Court can be kept a secret. Wednesday will be a great
+ day: you shall know more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 31. Our frost is broken since yesterday, and it is very slabbery;(4) yet I
+ walked to the City and dined, and ordered some things with the printer. I
+ have settled Dr. King in the Gazette; it will be worth two hundred pounds
+ a year to him. Our new lords' patents are passed: I don't like the
+ expedient, if we could have found any other. I see I have said this
+ before. I hear the Duke of Marlborough is turned out of all his
+ employments: I shall know to-morrow when I am to carry Dr. King to dine
+ with the Secretary.&mdash;These are strong remedies; pray God the patient
+ is able to bear them. The last Ministry people are utterly desperate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jan. 1. Now I wish my dearest little MD many happy new years; yes, both
+ Dingley and Stella, ay and Presto too, many happy new years. I dined with
+ the Secretary, and it is true that the Duke of Marlborough is turned out
+ of all. The Duke of Ormond has got his regiment of foot-guards, I know not
+ who has the rest. If the Ministry be not sure of a peace, I shall wonder
+ at this step, and do not approve it at best. The Queen and Lord Treasurer
+ mortally hate the Duke of Marlborough, and to that he owes his fall, more
+ than to his other faults: unless he has been tampering too far with his
+ party, of which I have not heard any particulars; however it be, the world
+ abroad will blame us. I confess my belief that he has not one good quality
+ in the world beside that of a general, and even that I have heard denied
+ by several great soldiers. But we have had constant success in arms while
+ he commanded. Opinion is a mighty matter in war, and I doubt the French
+ think it impossible to conquer an army that he leads, and our soldiers
+ think the same; and how far even this step may encourage the French to
+ play tricks with us, no man knows. I do not love to see personal
+ resentment mix with public affairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. This being the day the Lords meet, and the new peers to be introduced,
+ I went to Westminster to see the sight; but the crowd was too great in the
+ house. So I only went into the robing-room, to give my four brothers joy,
+ and Sir Thomas Mansel,(5) and Lord Windsor; the other six I am not
+ acquainted with. It was apprehended the Whigs would have raised some
+ difficulties, but nothing happened. I went to see Lady Masham at noon, and
+ wish her joy of her new honour, and a happy new year. I found her very
+ well pleased; for peerage will be some sort of protection to her upon any
+ turn of affairs. She engaged me to come at night, and sup with her and
+ Lord Treasurer: I went at nine, and she was not at home, so I would not
+ stay.&mdash;No, no, I won't answer your letter yet, young women. I dined
+ with a friend in the neighbourhood. I see nothing here like Christmas,
+ except brawn or mince-pies in places where I dine, and giving away my
+ half-crowns like farthings to great men's porters and butlers. Yesterday I
+ paid seven good guineas to the fellow at the tavern where I treated the
+ Society. I have a great mind to send you the bill. I think I told you some
+ articles. I have not heard whether anything was done in the House of Lords
+ after introducing the new ones. Ford has been sitting with me till peeast
+ tweeleve a clock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. This was our Society day: Lord Dupplin was President; we choose every
+ week; the last President treats and chooses his successor. I believe our
+ dinner cost fifteen pounds beside wine. The Secretary grew brisk, and
+ would not let me go, nor Lord Lansdowne,(6) who would fain have gone home
+ to his lady, being newly married to Lady Mary Thynne. It was near one when
+ we parted, so you must think I cannot write much to-night. The adjourning
+ of the House of Lords yesterday, as the Queen desired, was just carried by
+ the twelve new lords, and one more. Lord Radnor was not there: I hope I
+ have cured him. Did I tell you that I have brought Dr. King in to be
+ Gazetteer? It will be worth above two hundred pounds a year to him: I
+ believe I told you so before, but I am forgetful. Go, get you gone to
+ ombre, and claret, and toasted oranges. I'll go sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. I cannot get rid of the leavings of my cold. I was in the City to-day,
+ and dined with my printer, and gave him a ballad made by several hands, I
+ know not whom. I believe Lord Treasurer had a finger in it; I added three
+ stanzas; I suppose Dr. Arbuthnot had the greatest share. I had been
+ overseeing some other little prints, and a pamphlet made by one of my
+ under-strappers. Somerset is not out yet. I doubt not but you will have
+ the Prophecy in Ireland, although it is not published here, only printed
+ copies given to friends. Tell me, do you understand it? No, faith, not
+ without help. Tell me what you stick at, and I'll explain. We turned out a
+ member of our Society yesterday for gross neglect and non-attendance. I
+ writ to him by order to give him notice of it. It is Tom Harley,(7)
+ secretary to the Treasurer, and cousin-german to Lord Treasurer. He is
+ going to Hanover from the Queen. I am to give the Duke of Ormond notice of
+ his election as soon as I can see him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. I went this morning with a parishioner of mine, one Nuttal, who came
+ over here for a legacy of one hundred pounds, and a roguish lawyer had
+ refused to pay him, and would not believe he was the man. I writ to the
+ lawyer a sharp letter, that I had taken Nuttal into my protection, and was
+ resolved to stand by him, and the next news was, that the lawyer desired I
+ would meet him, and attest he was the man, which I did, and his money was
+ paid upon the spot. I then visited Lord Treasurer, who is now right again,
+ and all well, only that the Somerset family is not out yet. I hate that; I
+ don't like it, as the man said, by, etc. Then I went and visited poor Will
+ Congreve, who had a French fellow tampering with one of his eyes; he is
+ almost blind of both. I dined with some merchants in the City, but could
+ not see Stratford, with whom I had business. Presto, leave off your
+ impertinence, and answer our letter, saith MD. Yes, yes, one of these
+ days, when I have nothing else to do. O, faith, this letter is a week
+ written, and not one side done yet. These ugly spots are not tobacco, but
+ this is the last gilt sheet I have of large paper, therefore hold your
+ tongue. Nuttal was surprised when they gave him bits of paper instead of
+ money, but I made Ben Tooke put him in his geers:(8) he could not reckon
+ ten pounds, but was puzzled with the Irish way. Ben Tooke and my printer
+ have desired me to make them stationers to the Ordnance, of which Lord
+ Rivers is Master, instead of the Duke of Marlborough. It will be a hundred
+ pounds a year apiece to them, if I can get it. I will try to-morrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. I went this morning to Earl Rivers, gave him joy of his new employment,
+ and desired him to prefer my printer and bookseller to be stationers to
+ his office. He immediately granted it me; but, like an old courtier, told
+ me it was wholly on my account, but that he heard I had intended to engage
+ Mr. Secretary to speak to him, and desired I would engage him to do so,
+ but that, however, he did it only for my sake. This is a Court trick, to
+ oblige as many as you can at once. I read prayers to poor Mrs. Wesley, who
+ is very much out of order, instead of going to church; and then I went to
+ Court, which I found very full, in expectation of seeing Prince Eugene,
+ who landed last night, and lies at Leicester House; he was not to see the
+ Queen till six this evening. I hope and believe he comes too late to do
+ the Whigs any good. I refused dining with the Secretary, and was like to
+ lose my dinner, which was at a private acquaintance's. I went at six to
+ see the Prince at Court, but he was gone in to the Queen; and when he came
+ out, Mr. Secretary, who introduced him, walked so near him that he quite
+ screened me from him with his great periwig. I'll tell you a good passage:
+ as Prince Eugene was going with Mr. Secretary to Court, he told the
+ Secretary that Hoffman, the Emperor's Resident, said to His Highness that
+ it was not proper to go to Court without a long wig, and his was a tied-up
+ one: "Now," says the Prince, "I knew not what to do, for I never had a
+ long periwig in my life; and I have sent to all my valets and footmen, to
+ see whether any of them have one, that I might borrow it, but none of them
+ has any."&mdash;Was not this spoken very greatly with some sort of
+ contempt? But the Secretary said it was a thing of no consequence, and
+ only observed by gentlemen ushers. I supped with Lord Masham, where Lord
+ Treasurer and Mr. Secretary supped with us: the first left us at twelve,
+ but the rest did not part till two, yet I have written all this, because
+ it is fresh: and now I'll go sleep if I can; that is, I believe I shall,
+ because I have drank a little.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. I was this morning to give the Duke of Ormond notice of the honour done
+ him to make him one of our Society, and to invite him on Thursday next to
+ the Thatched House: he has accepted it with the gratitude and humility
+ such a preferment deserves, but cannot come till the next meeting, because
+ Prince Eugene is to dine with him that day, which I allowed for: a good
+ excuse, and will report accordingly. I dined with Lord Masham, and sat
+ there till eight this evening, and came home, because I was not very well,
+ but a little griped; but now I am well again, I will not go, at least but
+ very seldom, to Lord Masham's suppers. Lord Treasurer is generally there,
+ and that tempts me, but late sitting up does not agree with me: there's
+ the short and the long, and I won't do it; so take your answer, dear
+ little young women; and I have no more to say to you to-night, because of
+ the Archbishop, for I am going to write a long letter to him, but not so
+ politely as formerly: I won't trust him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. Well, then, come, let us see this letter; if I must answer it, I must.
+ What's here now? yes, faith, I lamented my birthday(9) two days after, and
+ that's all: and you rhyme, Madam Stella; were those verses made upon my
+ birthday? faith, when I read them, I had them running in my head all the
+ day, and said them over a thousand times; they drank your health in all
+ their glasses, and wished, etc. I could not get them out of my head. What?
+ no, I believe it was not; what do I say upon the eighth of December?
+ Compare, and see whether I say so. I am glad of Mrs. Stoyte's recovery,
+ heartily glad; your Dolly Manley's and Bishop of Cloyne's(10) child I have
+ no concern about: I am sorry in a civil way, that's all. Yes, yes, Sir
+ George St. George dead.(11)&mdash;Go, cry, Madam Dingley; I have written
+ to the Dean. Raymond will be rich, for he has the building itch. I wish
+ all he has got may put him out of debt. Poh, I have fires like lightning;
+ they cost me twelvepence a week, beside small coal. I have got four new
+ caps, madam, very fine and convenient, with striped cambric, instead of
+ muslin; so Patrick need not mend them, but take the old ones. Stella
+ snatched Dingley's word out of her pen; Presto a cold? Why, all the world
+ here is dead with them: I never had anything like it in my life; 'tis not
+ gone in five weeks. I hope Leigh is with you before this, and has brought
+ your box. How do you like the ivory rasp? Stella is angry; but I'll have a
+ finer thing for her. Is not the apron as good? I'm sure I shall never be
+ paid it; so all's well again.&mdash;What? the quarrel with Sir John
+ Walter?(12) Why, we had not one word of quarrel; only he railed at me when
+ I was gone: and Lord Keeper and Treasurer teased me for a week. It was
+ nuts to them; a serious thing with a vengeance.&mdash;The Whigs may sell
+ their estates then, or hang themselves, as they are disposed; for a peace
+ there will be. Lord Treasurer told me that Connolly(13) was going to
+ Hanover. Your Provost(14) is a coxcomb. Stella is a good girl for not
+ being angry when I tell her of spelling; I see none wrong in this. God
+ Almighty be praised that your disorder lessens; it increases my hopes
+ mightily that they will go off. And have you been plagued with the fear of
+ the plague? never mind those reports; I have heard them five hundred
+ times. Replevi? Replevin, simpleton, 'tis Dingley I mean; but it is a hard
+ word, and so I'll excuse it. I stated Dingley's accounts in my last. I
+ forgot Catherine's sevenpenny dinner. I hope it was the beef-steaks; I'll
+ call and eat them in spring; but Goody Stoyte must give me coffee, or
+ green tea, for I drink no bohea. Well, ay, the pamphlet; but there are
+ some additions to the fourth edition; the fifth edition was of four
+ thousand, in a smaller print, sold for sixpence. Yes, I had the
+ twenty-pound bill from Parvisol: and what then? Pray now eat the Laracor
+ apples; I beg you not to keep them, but tell me what they are. You have
+ had Tooke's bill in my last. And so there now, your whole letter is
+ answered. I tell you what I do; I lay your letter before me, and take it
+ in order, and answer what is necessary; and so and so. Well, when I
+ expected we were all undone, I designed to retire for six months, and then
+ steal over to Laracor; and I had in my mouth a thousand times two lines of
+ Shakespeare, where Cardinal Wolsey says,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "A weak old man, battered with storms of state,
+ Is come to lay his weary bones among you."(15)
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I beg your pardon; I have cheated you all this margin, I did not perceive
+ it; and I went on wider and wider like Stella; awkward sluts; SHE WRITES
+ SO SO, THERE:(16) that's as like as two eggs a penny.&mdash;"A weak old
+ man," now I am saying it, and shall till to-morrow.&mdash;The Duke of
+ Marlborough says there is nothing he now desires so much as to contrive
+ some way how to soften Dr. Swift. He is mistaken; for those things that
+ have been hardest against him were not written by me. Mr. Secretary told
+ me this from a friend of the Duke's; and I'm sure now he is down, I shall
+ not trample on him; although I love him not, I dislike his being out.&mdash;Bernage
+ was to see me this morning, and gave some very indifferent excuses for not
+ calling here so long. I care not twopence. Prince Eugene did not dine with
+ the Duke of Marlborough on Sunday, but was last night at Lady Betty
+ Germaine's assemblee, and a vast number of ladies to see him. Mr. Lewis
+ and I dined with a private friend. I was this morning to see the Duke of
+ Ormond, who appointed me to meet him at the Cockpit at one, but never
+ came. I sat too some time with the Duchess. We don't like things very well
+ yet. I am come home early, and going to be busy. I'll go write.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. I could not go sleep last night till past two, and was waked before
+ three by a noise of people endeavouring to break open my window. For a
+ while I would not stir, thinking it might be my imagination; but hearing
+ the noise continued, I rose and went to the window, and then it ceased. I
+ went to bed again, and heard it repeated more violently; then I rose and
+ called up the house, and got a candle: the rogues had lifted up the sash a
+ yard; there are great sheds before my windows, although my lodgings be a
+ storey high; and if they get upon the sheds they are almost even with my
+ window. We observed their track, and panes of glass fresh broken. The
+ watchmen told us to-day they saw them, but could not catch them. They
+ attacked others in the neighbourhood about the same time, and actually
+ robbed a house in Suffolk Street, which is the next street but one to us.
+ It is said they are seamen discharged from service. I went up to call my
+ man, and found his bed empty; it seems he often lies abroad. I challenged
+ him this morning as one of the robbers. He is a sad dog; and the minute I
+ come to Ireland I will discard him. I have this day got double iron bars
+ to every window in my dining-room and bed-chamber; and I hide my purse in
+ my thread stocking between the bed's head and the wainscot. Lewis and I
+ dined with an old Scotch friend, who brought the Duke of Douglas(17) and
+ three or four more Scots upon us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. This was our Society day, you know; but the Duke of Ormond could not
+ be with us, because he dined with Prince Eugene. It cost me a guinea
+ contribution to a poet, who had made a copy of verses upon monkeys,
+ applying the story to the Duke of Marlborough; the rest gave two guineas,
+ except the two physicians,(18) who followed my example. I don't like this
+ custom: the next time I will give nothing. I sat this evening at Lord
+ Masham's with Lord Treasurer: I don't like his countenance; nor I don't
+ like the posture of things well.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ We cannot be stout,
+ Till Somerset's out:
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ as the old saying is.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. Mr. Lewis and I dined with the Chancellor of the Exchequer, who eats
+ the most elegantly of any man I know in town. I walked lustily in the Park
+ by moonshine till eight, to shake off my dinner and wine; and then went to
+ sup at Mr. Domville's with Ford, and stayed till twelve. It is told me
+ to-day as a great secret that the Duke of Somerset will be out soon, that
+ the thing is fixed; but what shall we do with the Duchess? They say the
+ Duke will make her leave the Queen out of spite, if he be out. It has
+ stuck upon that fear a good while already. Well, but Lewis gave me a
+ letter from MD, N.25. O Lord, I did not expect one this fortnight, faith.
+ You are mighty good, that's certain: but I won't answer it, because this
+ goes to-morrow, only what you say of the printer being taken up; I value
+ it not; all's safe there; nor do I fear anything, unless the Ministry be
+ changed: I hope that danger is over. However, I shall be in Ireland before
+ such a change; which could not be, I think, till the end of the session,
+ if the Whigs' designs had gone on.&mdash;Have not you an apron by Leigh,
+ Madam Stella? have you all I mentioned in a former letter?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. Morning. This goes to-day as usual. I think of going into the City;
+ but of that at night. 'Tis fine moderate weather these two or three days
+ last. Farewell, etc. etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0042" id="link2H_4_0042">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 39.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, Jan. 12,1711-12.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ When I sealed up my letter this morning, I looked upon myself to be not
+ worth a groat in the world. Last night, after Mr. Ford and I left
+ Domville, Ford desired me to go with him for a minute upon earnest
+ business, and then told me that both he and I were ruined; for he had
+ trusted Stratford with five hundred pounds for tickets for the lottery,
+ and he had been with Stratford, who confessed he had lost fifteen thousand
+ pounds by Sir Stephen Evans,(1) who broke last week; that he concluded
+ Stratford must break too; that he could not get his tickets, but Stratford
+ made him several excuses, which seemed very blind ones, etc. And Stratford
+ had near four hundred pounds of mine, to buy me five hundred pounds in the
+ South Sea Company. I came home reflecting a little; nothing concerned me
+ but MD. I called all my philosophy and religion up; and, I thank God, it
+ did not keep me awake beyond my usual time above a quarter of an hour.
+ This morning I sent for Tooke, whom I had employed to buy the stock of
+ Stratford, and settle things with him. He told me I was secure; for
+ Stratford had transferred it to me in form in the South Sea House, and he
+ had accepted it for me, and all was done on stamped parchment. However, he
+ would be further informed; and at night sent me a note to confirm me.
+ However, I am not yet secure; and, besides, am in pain for Ford, whom I
+ first brought acquainted with Stratford. I dined in the City.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. Domville and I dined with Ford to-day by appointment: the Lord Mansel
+ told me at Court to-day that I was engaged to him; but Stratford had
+ promised Ford to meet him and me to-night at Ford's lodgings. He did so;
+ said he had hopes to save himself in his affair with Evans. Ford asked him
+ for his tickets: he said he would send them tomorrow; but looking in his
+ pocket-book, said he believed he had some of them about him, and gave him
+ as many as came to two hundred pounds, which rejoiced us much; besides, he
+ talked so frankly, that we might think there is no danger. I asked him,
+ Was there any more to be settled between us in my affair? He said, No; and
+ answered my questions just as Tooke had got them from others; so I hope I
+ am safe. This has been a scurvy affair. I believe Stella would have half
+ laughed at me, to see a suspicious fellow like me overreached. I saw
+ Prince Eugene to-day at Court: I don't think him an ugly-faced fellow, but
+ well enough, and a good shape.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. The Parliament was to sit to-day, and met; but were adjourned by the
+ Queen's directions till Thursday. She designs to make some important
+ speech then. She pretended illness; but I believe they were not ready, and
+ they expect some opposition: and the Scotch lords are angry,(2) and must
+ be pacified. I was this morning to invite the Duke of Ormond to our
+ Society on Thursday, where he is then to be introduced. He has appointed
+ me at twelve to-morrow about some business: I would fain have his help to
+ impeach a certain lord; but I doubt we shall make nothing of it. I
+ intended to have dined with Lord Treasurer, but I was told he would be
+ busy: so I dined with Mrs. Van; and at night I sat with Lord Masham till
+ one. Lord Treasurer was there, and chid me for not dining with him: he was
+ in very good humour. I brought home two flasks of burgundy in my chair: I
+ wish MD had them. You see it is very late; so I'll go to bed, and bid MD
+ good night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. This morning I presented my printer and bookseller to Lord Rivers, to
+ be stationers to the Ordnance; stationers, that's the word; I did not
+ write it plain at first. I believe it will be worth three hundred pounds a
+ year between them. This is the third employment I have got for them.
+ Rivers told them the Doctor commanded him, and he durst not refuse it. I
+ would have dined with Lord Treasurer to-day again, but Lord Mansel would
+ not let me, and forced me home with him. I was very deep with the Duke of
+ Ormond to-day at the Cockpit, where we met to be private; but I doubt I
+ cannot do the mischief I intended. My friend Penn came there, Will Penn
+ the Quaker, at the head of his brethren, to thank the Duke for his
+ kindness to their people in Ireland. To see a dozen scoundrels with their
+ hats on, and the Duke complimenting with his off, was a good sight enough.
+ I sat this evening with Sir William Robinson,(3) who has mighty often
+ invited me to a bottle of wine: and it is past twelve.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. This being fast-day, Dr. Freind and I went into the City to dine late,
+ like good fasters. My printer and bookseller want me to hook in another
+ employment for them in the Tower, because it was enjoyed before by a
+ stationer, although it be to serve the Ordnance with oil, tallow, etc.,
+ and is worth four hundred pounds per annum more: I will try what I can do.
+ They are resolved to ask several other employments of the same nature to
+ other offices; and I will then grease fat sows, and see whether it be
+ possible to satisfy them. Why am not I a stationer? The Parliament sits
+ to-morrow, and Walpole, late Secretary at War, is to be swinged for
+ bribery, and the Queen is to communicate something of great importance to
+ the two Houses, at least they say so. But I must think of answering your
+ letter in a day or two.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. I went this morning to the Duke of Ormond about some business, and he
+ told me he could not dine with us today, being to dine with Prince Eugene.
+ Those of our Society of the House of Commons could not be with us, the
+ House sitting late on Walpole. I left them at nine, and they were not
+ come. We kept some dinner for them. I hope Walpole will be sent to the
+ Tower, and expelled the House; but this afternoon the members I spoke with
+ in the Court of Requests talked dubiously of it. It will be a leading card
+ to maul the Duke of Marlborough for the same crime, or at least to censure
+ him. The Queen's message was only to give them notice of the peace she is
+ treating, and to desire they will make some law to prevent libels against
+ the Government; so farewell to Grub Street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. I heard to-day that the commoners of our Society did not leave the
+ Parliament till eleven at night, then went to those I left, and stayed
+ till three in the morning. Walpole is expelled, and sent to the Tower. I
+ was this morning again with Lord Rivers, and have made him give the other
+ employment to my printer and bookseller; 'tis worth a great deal. I dined
+ with my friend Lewis privately, to talk over affairs. We want to have this
+ Duke of Somerset out, and he apprehends it will not be, but I hope better.
+ They are going now at last to change the Commissioners of the Customs; my
+ friend Sir Matthew Dudley will be out, and three more, and Prior will be
+ in. I have made Ford copy out a small pamphlet, and sent it to the press,
+ that I might not be known for author; 'tis A Letter to the October
+ Club,(4) if ever you heard of such a thing.&mdash;Methinks this letter
+ goes on but slowly for almost a week: I want some little conversation with
+ MD, and to know what they are doing just now. I am sick of politics. I
+ have not dined with Lord Treasurer these three weeks: he chides me, but I
+ don't care: I don't.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. I dined to-day with Lord Treasurer: this is his day of choice company,
+ where they sometimes admit me, but pretend to grumble. And to-day they met
+ on some extraordinary business; the Keeper, Steward, both Secretaries,
+ Lord Rivers, and Lord Anglesea: I left them at seven, and came away, and
+ have been writing to the Bishop of Clogher. I forgot to know where to
+ direct to him since Sir George St. George's death,(5) but I have directed
+ to the same house: you must tell me better, for the letter is sent by the
+ bellman. Don't write to me again till this is gone, I charge you, for I
+ won't answer two letters together. The Duke of Somerset is out, and was
+ with his yellow liveries at Parliament to-day. You know he had the same
+ with the Queen, when he was Master of the Horse: we hope the Duchess will
+ follow, or that he will take her away in spite. Lord Treasurer, I hope,
+ has now saved his head. Has the Dean received my letter? ask him at cards
+ to-night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. There was a world of people to-day at Court to see Prince Eugene, but
+ all bit, for he did not come. I saw the Duchess of Somerset talking with
+ the Duke of Buckingham; she looked a little down, but was extremely
+ courteous. The Queen has the gout, but is not in much pain. Must I fill
+ this line too?(6) well then, so let it be. The Duke of Beaufort(7) has a
+ mighty mind to come into our Society; shall we let him? I spoke to the
+ Duke of Ormond about it, and he doubts a little whether to let him in or
+ no. They say the Duke of Somerset is advised by his friends to let his
+ wife stay with the Queen; I am sorry for it. I dined with the Secretary
+ to-day, with mixed company; I don't love it. Our Society does not meet
+ till Friday, because Thursday will be a busy day in the House of Commons,
+ for then the Duke of Marlborough's bribery is to be examined into about
+ the pension paid him by those that furnished bread to the army.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21. I have been five times with the Duke of Ormond about a perfect trifle,
+ and he forgets it: I used him like a dog this morning for it. I was asked
+ to-day by several in the Court of Requests whether it was true that the
+ author of the Examiner was taken up in an action of twenty thousand pounds
+ by the Duke of Marlborough?(8) I dined in the City, where my printer
+ showed me a pamphlet, called Advice to the October Club, which he said was
+ sent him by an unknown hand: I commended it mightily; he never suspected
+ me; 'tis a twopenny pamphlet. I came home and got timely to bed; but about
+ eleven one of the Secretary's servants came to me to let me know that Lord
+ Treasurer would immediately speak to me at Lord Masham's upon earnest
+ business, and that, if I was abed, I should rise and come. I did so: Lord
+ Treasurer was above with the Queen; and when he came down he laughed, and
+ said it was not he that sent for me: the business was of no great
+ importance, only to give me a paper, which might have been done to-morrow.
+ I stayed with them till past one, and then got to bed again. Pize(9) take
+ their frolics. I thought to have answered your letter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22. Dr. Gastrell was to see me this morning: he is an eminent divine, one
+ of the canons of Christ Church, and one I love very well: he said he was
+ glad to find I was not with James Broad. I asked what he meant. "Why,"
+ says he, "have you not seen the Grub Street paper, that says Dr. Swift was
+ taken up as author of the Examiner, on an action of twenty thousand
+ pounds, and was now at James Broad's?" who, I suppose, is some bailiff. I
+ knew of this; but at the Court of Requests twenty people told me they
+ heard I had been taken up. Lord Lansdowne observed to the Secretary and me
+ that the Whigs spread three lies yesterday; that about me; and another,
+ that Maccartney, who was turned out last summer,(10) is again restored to
+ his places in the army; and the third, that Jack Hill's commission for
+ Lieutenant of the Tower is stopped, and that Cadogan is to continue.
+ Lansdowne thinks they have some design by these reports; I cannot guess
+ it. Did I tell you that Sacheverell has desired mightily to come and see
+ me? but I have put it off: he has heard that I have spoken to the
+ Secretary in behalf of a brother whom he maintains, and who desires an
+ employment.(11) T'other day at the Court of Requests Dr. Yalden(12)
+ saluted me by name: Sacheverell, who was just by, came up to me, and made
+ me many acknowledgment and compliments. Last night I desired Lord
+ Treasurer to do something for that brother of Sacheverell's: he said he
+ never knew he had a brother, but thanked me for telling him, and
+ immediately put his name in his table-book.(13) I will let Sacheverell
+ know this, that he may take his measures accordingly, but he shall be none
+ of my acquaintance. I dined to-day privately with the Secretary, left him
+ at six, paid a visit or two, and came home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23. I dined again to-day with the Secretary, but could not despatch some
+ business I had with him, he has so much besides upon his hands at this
+ juncture, and preparing against the great business to-morrow, which we are
+ top full of. The Minister's design is that the Duke of Marlborough shall
+ be censured as gently as possible, provided his friends will not make head
+ to defend him, but if they do, it may end in some severer votes. A
+ gentleman, who was just now with him, tells me he is much cast down, and
+ fallen away; but he is positive, if he has but ten friends in the House,
+ that they shall defend him to the utmost, and endeavour to prevent the
+ least censure upon him, which I think cannot be, since the bribery is
+ manifest. Sir Solomon Medina(14) paid him six thousand pounds a year to
+ have the employment of providing bread for the army, and the Duke owns it
+ in his letter to the Commissioners of Accounts. I was to-night at Lord
+ Masham's: Lord Dupplin took out my new little pamphlet, and the Secretary
+ read a great deal of it to Lord Treasurer: they all commended it to the
+ skies, and so did I, and they began a health to the author. But I doubt
+ Lord Treasurer suspected; for he said, "This is Mr. Davenant's style,"
+ which is his cant when he suspects me.(15) But I carried the matter very
+ well. Lord Treasurer put the pamphlet in his pocket to read at home. I'll
+ answer your letter to-morrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24. The Secretary made me promise to dine with him today, after the
+ Parliament was up: I said I would come; but I dined at my usual time,
+ knowing the House would sit late on this great affair. I dined at a tavern
+ with Mr. Domville and another gentleman; I have not done so before these
+ many months. At ten this evening I went to the Secretary, but he was not
+ come home: I sat with his lady till twelve, then came away; and he just
+ came as I was gone, and he sent to my lodgings, but I would not go back;
+ and so I know not how things have passed, but hope all is well; and I will
+ tell you to-morrow day. It is late, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25. The Secretary sent to me this morning to know whether we should dine
+ together. I went to him, and there I learned that the question went
+ against the Duke of Marlborough, by a majority of a hundred; so the
+ Ministry is mighty well satisfied, and the Duke will now be able to do no
+ hurt. The Secretary and I, and Lord Masham, etc., dined with
+ Lieutenant-General Withers,(16) who is just going to look after the army
+ in Flanders: the Secretary and I left them a little after seven, and I am
+ come home, and will now answer your letter, because this goes to-morrow:
+ let me see&mdash;The box at Chester; oh, burn that box, and hang that
+ Sterne; I have desired one to inquire for it who went toward Ireland last
+ Monday, but I am in utter despair of it. No, I was not splenetic; you see
+ what plunges the Court has been at to set all right again. And that
+ Duchess is not out yet, and may one day cause more mischief. Somerset
+ shows all about a letter from the Queen, desiring him to let his wife
+ continue with her. Is not that rare! I find Dingley smelled a rat; because
+ the Whigs are UPISH; but if ever I hear that word again, I'll UPPISH you.
+ I am glad you got your rasp safe and sound; does Stella like her apron?
+ Your critics about guarantees of succession are puppies; that's an answer
+ to the objection. The answerers here made the same objection, but it is
+ wholly wrong. I am of your opinion that Lord Marlborough is used too
+ hardly: I have often scratched out passages from papers and pamphlets sent
+ me, before they were printed, because I thought them too severe. But he is
+ certainly a vile man, and has no sort of merit beside the military. The
+ Examiners are good for little: I would fain have hindered the severity of
+ the two or three last, but could not. I will either bring your papers
+ over, or leave them with Tooke, for whose honesty I will engage. And I
+ think it is best not to venture them with me at sea. Stella is a prophet,
+ by foretelling so very positively that all would be well. Duke of Ormond
+ speak against peace? No, simpleton, he is one of the staunchest we have
+ for the Ministry. Neither trouble yourself about the printer: he appeared
+ the first day of the term, and is to appear when summoned again; but
+ nothing else will come of it. Lord Chief-Justice(17) is cooled since this
+ new settlement. No; I will not split my journals in half; I will write but
+ once a fortnight: but you may do as you will; which is, read only half at
+ once, and t'other half next week. So now your letter is answered. (P&mdash;-
+ on these blots.) What must I say more? I will set out in March, if there
+ be a fit of fine weather; unless the Ministry desire me to stay till the
+ end of the session, which may be a month longer; but I believe they will
+ not: for I suppose the peace will be made, and they will have no further
+ service for me. I must make my canal fine this summer, as fine as I can. I
+ am afraid I shall see great neglects among my quicksets. I hope the
+ cherry-trees on the river walk are fine things now. But no more of this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26. I forgot to finish this letter this morning, and am come home so late
+ I must give it to the bellman; but I would have it go to-night, lest you
+ should think there is anything in the story of my being arrested in an
+ action of twenty thousand pounds by Lord Marlborough, which I hear is in
+ Dyer's Letter,(18) and, consequently, I suppose, gone to Ireland.
+ Farewell, dearest MD, etc. etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0043" id="link2H_4_0043">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 40.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, Jan. 26, 1711-12.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I have no gilt paper left of this size, so you must be content with plain.
+ Our Society dined together today, for it was put off, as I told you, upon
+ Lord Marlborough's business on Thursday. The Duke of Ormond dined with us
+ to-day, the first time: we were thirteen at table; and Lord Lansdowne came
+ in after dinner, so that we wanted but three. The Secretary proposed the
+ Duke of Beaufort, who desires to be one of our Society; but I stopped it,
+ because the Duke of Ormond doubts a little about it; and he was gone
+ before it was proposed. I left them at seven, and sat this evening with
+ poor Mrs. Wesley, who has been mightily ill to-day with a fainting fit;
+ she has often convulsions, too: she takes a mixture with asafoetida, which
+ I have now in my nose, and everything smells of it. I never smelt it
+ before; 'tis abominable. We have eight packets, they say, due from
+ Ireland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27. I could not see Prince Eugene at Court to-day, the crowd was so great.
+ The Whigs contrive to have a crowd always about him, and employ the rabble
+ to give the word, when he sets out from any place. When the Duchess of
+ Hamilton came from the Queen after church, she whispered me that she was
+ going to pay me a visit. I went to Lady Oglethorpe's, the place appointed;
+ for ladies always visit me in third places; and she kept me till near
+ four: she talks too much, is a plaguy detractor, and I believe I shall not
+ much like her. I was engaged to dine with Lord Masham: they stayed as long
+ as they could, yet had almost dined, and were going in anger to pull down
+ the brass peg for my hat, but Lady Masham saved it. At eight I went again
+ to Lord Masham's; Lord Treasurer is generally there at night: we sat up
+ till almost two. Lord Treasurer has engaged me to contrive some way to
+ keep the Archbishop of York(1) from being seduced by Lord Nottingham. I
+ will do what I can in it to-morrow. 'Tis very late, so I must go sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28. Poor Mrs. Manley, the author, is very ill of a dropsy and sore leg:
+ the printer tells me he is afraid she cannot live long. I am heartily
+ sorry for her: she has very generous principles for one of her sort, and a
+ great deal of good sense and invention: she is about forty, very homely,
+ and very fat. Mrs. Van made me dine with her to-day. I was this morning
+ with the Duke of Ormond and the Prolocutor about what Lord Treasurer spoke
+ to me yesterday; I know not what will be the issue. There is but a slender
+ majority in the House of Lords, and we want more. We are sadly mortified
+ at the news of the French taking the town in Brazil from the Portuguese.
+ The sixth edition of three thousand of the Conduct of the Allies is sold,
+ and the printer talks of a seventh: eleven thousand of them have been
+ sold, which is a most prodigious run. The little twopenny Letter of Advice
+ to the October Club does not sell: I know not the reason, for it is finely
+ written, I assure you; and, like a true author, I grow fond of it, because
+ it does not sell: you know that it is usual to writers to condemn the
+ judgment of the world: if I had hinted it to be mine, everybody would have
+ bought it, but it is a great secret.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29. I borrowed one or two idle books of Contes des Fees,(2) and have been
+ reading them these two days, although I have much business upon my hands.
+ I loitered till one at home; then went to Mr. Lewis at his office; and the
+ Vice-Chamberlain told me that Lady Rialton(3) had yesterday resigned her
+ employment of lady of the bed-chamber, and that Lady Jane Hyde,(4) Lord
+ Rochester's daughter, a mighty pretty girl, is to succeed. He said, too,
+ that Lady Sunderland would resign in a day or two. I dined with Lewis, and
+ then went to see Mrs. Wesley, who is better to-day. But you must know that
+ Mr. Lewis gave me two letters, one from the Bishop of Cloyne, with an
+ enclosed from Lord Inchiquin(5) to Lord Treasurer, which he desires I
+ would deliver and recommend. I am told that lord was much in with Lord
+ Wharton, and I remember he was to have been one of the Lords Justices by
+ his recommendation; yet the Bishop recommends him as a great friend to the
+ Church, etc. I'll do what I think proper. T'other letter was from little
+ saucy MD, N.26. O Lord, never saw the like, under a cover, too, and by way
+ of journal; we shall never have done. Sirrahs, how durst you write so
+ soon, sirrahs? I won't answer it yet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30. I was this morning with the Secretary, who was sick, and out of
+ humour: he would needs drink champagne some days ago, on purpose to spite
+ me, because I advised him against it, and now he pays for it. Stella used
+ to do such tricks formerly; he put me in mind of her. Lady Sunderland has
+ resigned her place too. It is Lady Catherine Hyde(6) that succeeds Lady
+ Rialton, and not Lady Jane. Lady Catherine is the late Earl of Rochester's
+ daughter. I dined with the Secretary, then visited his lady; and sat this
+ evening with Lady Masham: the Secretary came to us; but Lord Treasurer did
+ not; he dined with the Master of the Rolls,(7) and stayed late with him.
+ Our Society does not meet till to-morrow se'nnight, because we think the
+ Parliament will be very busy to-morrow upon the state of the war, and the
+ Secretary, who is to treat as President, must be in the House. I fancy my
+ talking of persons and things here must be very tedious to you, because
+ you know nothing of them, and I talk as if you did. You know Kevin's
+ Street, and Werburgh Street, and (what do you call the street where Mrs.
+ Walls lives?) and Ingoldsby,(8) and Higgins,(9) and Lord Santry;(10) but
+ what care you for Lady Catherine Hyde? Why do you say nothing of your
+ health, sirrah? I hope it is well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 31. Trimnel, Bishop of Norwich,(11) who was with this Lord Sunderland at
+ Moor Park in their travels, preached yesterday before the House of Lords;
+ and to-day the question was put to thank him, and print his sermon; but
+ passed against him; for it was a terrible Whig sermon. The Bill to repeal
+ the Act for naturalising Protestant foreigners passed the House of Lords
+ to-day by a majority of twenty, though the Scotch lords went out, and
+ would vote neither way, in discontent about the Duke of Hamilton's patent,
+ if you know anything of it. A poem is come out to-day inscribed to me, by
+ way of a flirt;(12) for it is a Whiggish poem, and good for nothing. They
+ plagued me with it in the Court of Requests. I dined with Lord Treasurer
+ at five alone, only with one Dutchman. Prior is now a Commissioner of the
+ Customs. I told you so before, I suppose. When I came home to-night, I
+ found a letter from Dr. Sacheverell, thanking me for recommending his
+ brother to Lord Treasurer and Mr. Secretary for a place. Lord Treasurer
+ sent to him about it: so good a solicitor was I, although I once hardly
+ thought I should be a solicitor for Sacheverell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Feb. 1. Has not your Dean of St. Patrick received my letter? you say
+ nothing of it, although I writ above a month ago. My printer has got the
+ gout, and I was forced to go to him to-day, and there I dined. It was a
+ most delicious day: why don't you observe whether the same days be fine
+ with you? To-night, at six, Dr. Atterbury, and Prior, and I, and Dr.
+ Freind, met at Dr. Robert Freind's(13) house at Westminster, who is master
+ of the school: there we sat till one, and were good enough company. I here
+ take leave to tell politic Dingley that the passage in the Conduct of the
+ Allies is so far from being blamable that the Secretary designs to insist
+ upon it in the House of Commons, when the Treaty of Barrier(14) is debated
+ there, as it now shortly will, for they have ordered it to be laid before
+ them. The pamphlet of Advice to the October Club begins now to sell; but I
+ believe its fame will hardly reach Ireland: 'tis finely written, I assure
+ you. I long to answer your letter, but won't yet; you know, 'tis late,
+ etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. This ends Christmas,(15) and what care I? I have neither seen, nor
+ felt, nor heard any Christmas this year. I passed a lazy dull day. I was
+ this morning with Lord Treasurer, to get some papers from him, which he
+ will remember as much as a cat, although it be his own business. It
+ threatened rain, but did not much; and Prior and I walked an hour in the
+ Park, which quite put me out of my measures. I dined with a friend hard
+ by; and in the evening sat with Lord Masham till twelve. Lord Treasurer
+ did not come; this is an idle dining-day usually with him. We want to hear
+ from Holland how our peace goes on; for we are afraid of those scoundrels
+ the Dutch, lest they should play us tricks. Lord Mar,(16) a Scotch earl,
+ was with us at Lord Masham's: I was arguing with him about the
+ stubbornness and folly of his countrymen; they are so angry about the
+ affair of the Duke of Hamilton, whom the Queen has made a duke of England,
+ and the House of Lords will not admit him. He swears he would vote for us,
+ but dare not, because all Scotland would detest him if he did: he should
+ never be chosen again, nor be able to live there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. I was at Court to-day to look for a dinner, but did not like any that
+ were offered me; and I dined with Lord Mountjoy. The Queen has the gout in
+ her knee, and was not at chapel. I hear we have a Dutch mail, but I know
+ not what news, although I was with the Secretary this morning. He showed
+ me a letter from the Hanover Envoy, Mr. Bothmar, complaining that the
+ Barrier Treaty is laid before the House of Commons; and desiring that no
+ infringement may be made in the guarantee of the succession; but the
+ Secretary has written him a peppering answer. I fancy you understand all
+ this, and are able states-girls, since you have read the Conduct of the
+ Allies. We are all preparing against the Birthday; I think it is Wednesday
+ next. If the Queen's gout increases, it will spoil sport. Prince Eugene
+ has two fine suits made against it; and the Queen is to give him a sword
+ worth four thousand pounds, the diamonds set transparent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. I was this morning soliciting at the House of Commons' door for Mr.
+ Vesey, a son of the Archbishop of Tuam,(17) who has petitioned for a Bill
+ to relieve him in some difficulty about his estate: I secured him above
+ fifty members. I dined with Lady Masham. We have no packet from Holland,
+ as I was told yesterday: and this wind will hinder many people from
+ appearing at the Birthday, who expected clothes from Holland. I appointed
+ to meet a gentleman at the Secretary's to-night, and they both failed. The
+ House of Commons have this day made many severe votes about our being
+ abused by our Allies. Those who spoke drew all their arguments from my
+ book, and their votes confirm all I writ; the Court had a majority of a
+ hundred and fifty: all agree that it was my book that spirited them to
+ these resolutions; I long to see them in print. My head has not been as
+ well as I could wish it for some days past, but I have not had any giddy
+ fit, and I hope it will go over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. The Secretary turned me out of his room this morning, and showed me
+ fifty guineas rolled up, which he was going to give some French spy. I
+ dined with four Irishmen at a tavern to-day: I thought I had resolved
+ against it before, but I broke it. I played at cards this evening at Lady
+ Masham's, but I only played for her while she was waiting; and I won her a
+ pool, and supped there. Lord Treasurer was with us, but went away before
+ twelve. The ladies and lords have all their clothes ready against
+ to-morrow: I saw several mighty fine, and I hope there will be a great
+ appearance, in spite of that spiteful French fashion of the Whiggish
+ ladies not to come, which they have all resolved to a woman; and I hope it
+ will more spirit the Queen against them for ever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. I went to dine at Lord Masham's at three, and met all the company just
+ coming out of Court; a mighty crowd: they stayed long for their coaches: I
+ had an opportunity of seeing several lords and ladies of my acquaintance
+ in their fineries. Lady Ashburnham(18) looked the best in my eyes. They
+ say the Court was never fuller nor finer. Lord Treasurer, his lady, and
+ two daughters and Mrs. Hill, dined with Lord and Lady Masham; the five
+ ladies were monstrous fine. The Queen gave Prince Eugene the diamond sword
+ to-day; but nobody was by when she gave it except my Lord Chamberlain.
+ There was an entertainment of opera songs at night, and the Queen was at
+ all the entertainment, and is very well after it. I saw Lady Wharton,(19)
+ as ugly as the devil, coming out in the crowd all in an undress; she has
+ been with the Marlborough daughters(20) and Lady Bridgewater(21) in St.
+ James's, looking out of the window all undressed to see the sight. I do
+ not hear that one Whig lady was there, except those of the bed-chamber.
+ Nothing has made so great a noise as one Kelson's chariot, that cost nine
+ hundred and thirty pounds, the finest was ever seen. The rabble huzzaed
+ him as much as they did Prince Eugene. This is Birthday chat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. Our Society met to-day: the Duke of Ormond was not with us; we have
+ lessened our dinners, which were grown so extravagant that Lord Treasurer
+ and everybody else cried shame. I left them at seven, visited for an hour,
+ and then came home, like a good boy. The Queen is much better after
+ yesterday's exercise: her friends wish she would use a little more. I
+ opposed Lord Jersey's(22) election into our Society, and he is refused: I
+ likewise opposed the Duke of Beaufort; but I believe he will be chosen in
+ spite of me: I don't much care; I shall not be with them above two months;
+ for I resolve to set out for Ireland the beginning of April next (before I
+ treat them again), and see my willows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. I dined to-day in the City. This morning a scoundrel dog, one of the
+ Queen's music, a German, whom I had never seen, got access to me in my
+ chamber by Patrick's folly, and gravely desired me to get an employment in
+ the Customs for a friend of his, who would be very grateful; and likewise
+ to forward a project of his own, for raising ten thousand pounds a year
+ upon operas: I used him civiller than he deserved; but it vexed me to the
+ pluck.(23) He was told I had a mighty interest with Lord Treasurer, and
+ one word of mine, etc. Well; I got home early on purpose to answer MD's
+ letter, N.26; for this goes to-morrow.&mdash;Well; I never saw such a
+ letter in all my life; so saucy, so journalish, so sanguine, so
+ pretending, so everything. I satisfied all your fears in my last: all is
+ gone well, as you say; yet you are an impudent slut to be so positive; you
+ will swagger so upon your sagacity that we shall never have done. Pray
+ don't mislay your reply; I would certainly print it, if I had it here: how
+ long is it? I suppose half a sheet: was the answer written in Ireland?
+ Yes, yes, you shall have a letter when you come from Ballygall. I need not
+ tell you again who's out and who's in: we can never get out the Duchess of
+ Somerset.&mdash;So, they say Presto writ the Conduct, etc. Do they like
+ it? I don't care whether they do or no; but the resolutions printed
+ t'other day in the Votes are almost quotations from it, and would never
+ have passed if that book had not been written. I will not meddle with the
+ Spectator, let him fair-sex it to the world's end. My disorder is over,
+ but blood was not from the p-les.&mdash;Well, Madam Dingley, the frost;
+ why, we had a great frost, but I forget how long ago; it lasted above a
+ week or ten days: I believe about six weeks ago; but it did not break so
+ soon with us, I think, as December 29; yet I think it was about that time,
+ on second thoughts. MD can have no letter from Presto, says you; and yet
+ four days before you own you had my thirty-seventh, unreasonable sluts!
+ The Bishop of Gloucester is not dead,(24) and I am as likely to succeed
+ the Duke of Marlborough as him if he were; there's enough for that now. It
+ is not unlikely that the Duke of Shrewsbury will be your Governor; at
+ least I believe the Duke of Ormond will not return.&mdash;Well, Stella
+ again: why, really three editions of the Conduct, etc., is very much for
+ Ireland; it is a sign you have some honest among you. Well; I will do Mr.
+ Manley(25) all the service I can; but he will ruin himself. What business
+ had he to engage at all about the City? Can't he wish his cause well, and
+ be quiet, when he finds that stirring will do it no good, and himself a
+ great deal of hurt? I cannot imagine who should open my letter: it must be
+ done at your side.&mdash;If I hear of any thoughts of turning out Mr.
+ Manley, I will endeavour to prevent it. I have already had all the
+ gentlemen of Ireland here upon my back often, for defending him. So now I
+ have answered your saucy letter. My humble service to Goody Stoyte and
+ Catherine; I will come soon for my dinner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. Morning. My cold goes off at last; but I think I have got a small new
+ one. I have no news since last. They say we hear by the way of Calais,
+ that peace is very near concluding. I hope it may be true. I'll go and
+ seal up my letter, and give it myself to-night into the post-office; and
+ so I bid my dearest MD farewell till to-night. I heartily wish myself with
+ them, as hope saved. My willows, and quicksets, and trees, will be finely
+ improved, I hope, this year. It has been fine hard frosty weather
+ yesterday and to-day. Farewell, etc. etc. etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0044" id="link2H_4_0044">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 41.(1)
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, Feb. 9, 1711-12.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ When my letter is gone, and I have none of yours to answer, my conscience
+ is so clear, and my shoulder so light, and I go on with such courage to
+ prate upon nothing to deerichar MD, oo would wonder. I dined with Sir
+ Matthew Dudley, who is newly turned out of Commission of the Customs. He
+ affects a good heart, and talks in the extremity of Whiggery, which was
+ always his principle, though he was gentle a little, while he kept in
+ employment. We can yet get no packets from Holland. I have not been with
+ any of the Ministry these two or three days. I keep out of their way on
+ purpose, for a certain reason, for some time, though I must dine with the
+ Secretary to-morrow, the choosing of the company being left to me. I have
+ engaged Lord Anglesea(2) and Lord Carteret,(3) and have promised to get
+ three more; but I have a mind that none else should be admitted: however,
+ if I like anybody at Court to-morrow, I may perhaps invite them. I have
+ got another cold, but not very bad. Nite. .. MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. I saw Prince Eugene at Court to-day very plain; he's plaguy yellow,
+ and tolerably ugly besides. The Court was very full, and people had their
+ Birthday clothes. I dined with the Secretary to-day. I was to invite five,
+ but I only invited two, Lord Anglesea and Lord Carteret. Pshaw, I told you
+ this but yesterday. We have no packets from Holland yet. Here are a parcel
+ of drunken Whiggish lords, like your Lord Santry,(4) who come into
+ chocolate-houses and rail aloud at the Tories, and have challenges sent
+ them, and the next morning come and beg pardon. General Ross(5) was like
+ to swinge the Marquis of Winchester(6) for this trick t'other day; and we
+ have nothing else now to talk of till the Parliament has had another bout
+ with the state of the war, as they intended in a few days. They have
+ ordered the Barrier Treaty to be laid before them; and it was talked some
+ time ago, as if there was a design to impeach Lord Townshend, who made it.
+ I have no more politics now. Nite dee MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. I dined with Lord Anglesea to-day, who had seven Irishmen to be my
+ companions, of which two only were coxcombs; one I did not know, and
+ t'other was young Blith,(7) who is a puppy of figure here, with a fine
+ chariot. He asked me one day at Court, when I had been just talking with
+ some lords who stood near me, "Doctor, when shall we see you in the county
+ of Meath?" I whispered him to take care what he said, for the people would
+ think he was some barbarian. He never would speak to me since, till we met
+ to-day. I went to Lady Masham's to-night, and sat with Lord Treasurer and
+ the Secretary there till past two o'clock; and when I came home, found
+ some letters from Ireland, which I read, but can say nothing of them till
+ to-morrow, 'tis so very late; but I(8) must always be...,(9) late or
+ early. Nite deelest sollahs.(10)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. One letter was from the Bishop of Clogher last night, and t'other from
+ Walls, about Mrs. South's(11) salary, and his own pension of 18 pounds for
+ his tithe of the park. I will do nothing in either; the first I cannot
+ serve in, and the other is a trifle; only you may tell him I had his
+ letter, and will speak to Ned Southwell about what he desires me. You say
+ nothing of your Dean's receiving my letter. I find Clements,(12) whom I
+ recommended to Lord Anglesea last year, at Walls's desire, or rather the
+ Bishop of Clogher's, is mightily in Lord Anglesea's favour. You may tell
+ the Bishop and Walls so; I said to Lord Anglesea that I was (glad) I had
+ the good luck to recommend him, etc. I dined in the City with my printer,
+ to consult with him about some papers Lord Treasurer gave me last night,
+ as he always does, too late; however, I will do something with them. My
+ third cold is a little better; I never had anything like it before, three
+ colds successively; I hope I shall have the fourth.(13) Those messengers
+ come from Holland to-day, and they brought over the six packets that were
+ due. I know not the particulars yet, for when I was with the Secretary at
+ noon they were just opening; but one thing I find, that the Dutch are
+ playing us tricks, and tampering with the French; they are dogs; I shall
+ know more tomollow... MD.(14)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. I dined to-day privately with my friend Lewis, at his lodgings, to
+ consult about some observations on the Barrier Treaty. Our news from
+ Holland is not good. The French raise difficulties, and make such offers
+ to the Allies as cannot be accepted. And the Dutch are uneasy that we are
+ likely to get anything for ourselves; and the Whigs are glad at all this.
+ I came home early, and have been very busy three or four hours. I had a
+ letter from Dr. Pratt(15) to-day by a private hand, recommending the
+ bearer to me, for something that I shall not trouble myself about.
+ Wesley(16) writ to recommend the same fellow to me. His expression is
+ that, hearing I am acquainted with my Lord Treasurer, he desires I would
+ do so and so: a matter of nothing. What puppies are mankind! I hope I
+ shall be wiser when I have once done with Courts. I think you han't
+ troubled me much with your recommendations. I would do you all the
+ saavis(17) I could.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pray have you got your aplon,(18) maram Ppt? I paid for it but yesterday;
+ that puts me in mind of it. I writ an inventory of what things I sent by
+ Leigh in one of my letters; did you compare it with what you got? I hear
+ nothing of your cards now; do you never play? Yes, at Ballygall. Go to
+ bed. Nite, deelest MD.(19)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. Our Society dined to-day at Mr. Secretary's house. I went there at
+ four; but hearing the House of Commons would sit late upon the Barrier
+ Treaty, I went for an hour to Kensington, to see Lord Masham's children.
+ My young nephew,(20) his son of six months old, has got a swelling in his
+ neck; I fear it is the evil. We did not go to dinner till eight at night,
+ and I left them at ten. The Commons have been very severe on the Barrier
+ Treaty, as you will find by their votes. A Whig member took out the
+ Conduct of the Allies, and read that passage about the succession with
+ great resentment; but none seconded him. The Church party carried every
+ vote by a great majority. The A.B.(21) Dublin is so railed at by all who
+ come from Ireland that I can defend him no longer. Lord Anglesea assured
+ me that the story of applying Piso out of Tacitus(22) to Lord Treasurer's
+ being wounded is true. I believe the Duke of Beaufort will be admitted to
+ our Society next meeting. To-day I published the Fable of Midas,(23) a
+ poem, printed in a loose half-sheet of paper. I know not how it will sell;
+ but it passed wonderfully at our Society to-night; and Mr. Secretary read
+ it before me the other night to Lord Treasurer, at Lord Masham's, where
+ they equally approved of it. Tell me how it passes with you. I think this
+ paper is larger than ordinary; for here is six days' journal, and no
+ nearer the bottom. I fear these journals are very dull. Nite my deelest
+ lives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. Mr. Lewis and I dined by invitation with a Scotch acquaintance, after
+ I had been very busy in my chamber till two afternoon. My third cold is
+ now very troublesome on my breast, especially in the morning. This is a
+ great revolution in my health; colds never used to return so soon with me,
+ or last so long. 'Tis very surprising this news to-day of the Dauphin and
+ Dauphiness both dying within six days. They say the old King is almost
+ heart-broke. He has had prodigious mortifications in his family. The
+ Dauphin has left two little sons, of four and two years old; the eldest is
+ sick. There is a foolish story got about the town that Lord Strafford, one
+ of our Plenipotentiaries, is in the interests of France; and it has been a
+ good while said that Lord Privy Seal(24) and he do not agree very well.
+ They are both long practised in business, but neither of them of much
+ parts. Strafford has some life and spirit, but is infinitely proud, and
+ wholly illiterate. Nite, MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. I dined to-day in the City with my printer, to finish something I am
+ doing about the Barrier Treaty;(25) but it is not quite done. I went this
+ evening to Lord Masham's, where Lord Treasurer sat with us till past
+ twelve. The Lords have voted an Address to the Queen, to tell her they are
+ not satisfied with the King of France's offers. The Whigs brought it in of
+ a sudden; and the Court could not prevent it, and therefore did not oppose
+ it. The House of Lords is too strong in Whigs, notwithstanding the new
+ creations; for they are very diligent, and the Tories as lazy: the side
+ that is down has always most industry. The Whigs intended to have made a
+ vote that would reflect on Lord Treasurer; but their project was not ripe.
+ I hit my face such a rap by calling the coach to stop to-night, that it is
+ plaguy sore, the bone beneath the eye. Nite dee logues.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. The Court was mighty full to-day, and has been these many Sundays; but
+ the Queen was not at chapel. She has got a little fit of the gout in her
+ foot. The good of going to Court is that one sees all one's acquaintance,
+ whom otherwise I should hardly meet twice a year. Prince Eugene dines with
+ the Secretary to-day, with about seven or eight General Officers, or
+ foreign Ministers. They will be all drunk, I am sure. I never was in
+ company with this Prince: I have proposed to some lords that we should
+ have a sober meal with him; but I can't compass it. It is come over in the
+ Dutch news prints that I was arrested on an action of twenty thousand
+ pounds by the Duke of Marlborough. I did not like my Court invitation
+ to-day; so Sir Andrew Fountaine and I went and dined with Mrs. Van. I came
+ home at six, and have been very busy till this minute, and it is past
+ twelve. So I got into bed to write to MD... MD.(26) We reckon the
+ Dauphin's death will put forward the peace a good deal. Pray is Dr.
+ Griffith(27) reconciled to me yet? Have I done enough to soften him?...
+ (28) Nite deelest logues.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. Lewis had Guiscard's picture: he bought it, and offered it to Lord
+ Treasurer, who promised to send for it, but never did; so I made Lewis
+ give it me, and I have it in my room; and now Lord Treasurer says he will
+ take it from me: is that fair? He designs to have it at length in the
+ clothes he was when he did the action, and a penknife in his hand; and
+ Kneller is to copy it from this that I have. I intended to dine with Lord
+ Treasurer to-day, but he has put me off till to-morrow; so I dined with
+ Lord Dupplin. You know Lord Dupplin very well; he is a brother of the
+ Society. Well, but I have received a letter from the Bishop of Cloyne, to
+ solicit an affair for him with Lord Treasurer, and with the Parliament,
+ which I will do as soon as fly. I am not near so keen about other people's
+ affairs as... (29) Ppt used to reproach me about; it was a judgment on me.
+ Harkee, idle dearees both, meetinks I begin to want a rettle flom(30) MD:
+ faith, and so I do. I doubt you have been in pain about the report of my
+ being arrested. The pamphleteers have let me alone this month, which is a
+ great wonder: only the third part of the Answer to the Conduct, which is
+ lately come out. (Did I tell you of it already?) The House of Commons goes
+ on in mauling the late Ministry and their proceedings. Nite deelest
+ MD.(31)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. I dined with Lord Treasurer to-day, and sat with him till ten, in
+ spite of my teeth, though my printer waited for me to correct a sheet. I
+ told him of four lines I writ extempore with my pencil, on a bit of paper
+ in his house, while he lay wounded. Some of the servants, I suppose, made
+ waste-paper of them, and he never had heard of them. Shall I tell them
+ you? They were inscribed to Mr. Harley's physician. Thus
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ On Britain Europe's safety lies;(32)
+ Britain is lost, if Harley dies.
+ Harley depends upon your skill:
+ Think what you save, or what you kill.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Are not they well enough to be done off-hand; for that is the meaning of
+ the word extempore, which you did not know, did you? I proposed that some
+ company should dine with him on the 8th of March, which was the day he was
+ wounded, but he says he designs that the Lords of the Cabinet, who then
+ sat with him, should dine that day with him:(33) however, he has invited
+ me too. I am not got rid of my cold; it plagues me in the morning chiefly.
+ Nite, MD,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. After waiting to catch the Secretary coming out from Sir Thomas
+ Hanmer, for two hours, in vain, about some business, I went into the City
+ to my printer, to correct some sheets of the Barrier Treaty and Remarks,
+ which must be finished to-morrow: I have been horrible busy for some days
+ past, with this and some other things; and I wanted some very necessary
+ papers, which the Secretary was to give me, and the pamphlet must now be
+ published without them. But they are all busy too. Sir Thomas Hanmer is
+ Chairman of the Committee for drawing up a Representation of the state of
+ the nation(34) to the Queen, where all the wrong steps of the Allies and
+ late Ministry about the war will be mentioned. The Secretary, I suppose,
+ was helping him about it to-day; I believe it will be a pepperer. Nite,
+ deel MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21. I have been six hours to-day morning writing nineteen pages of a
+ letter to Lord Treasurer, about forming a Society or Academy to correct
+ and fix the English language.(35) (Is English a speech or a language?) It
+ will not be above five or six more. I will send it to him to-morrow, and
+ will print it, if he desires me. I dined, you know, with our Society
+ to-day: Thursday is our day. We had a new member admitted; it was the Duke
+ of Beaufort. We had thirteen met: brother Ormond was not there, but sent
+ his excuse that Prince Eugene dined with him. I left them at seven, being
+ engaged to go to Sir Thomas Hanmer, who desired I would see him at that
+ hour. His business was that I would hoenlbp ihainm itavoi dsroanws ubpl
+ tohne sroegporaensiepnotlastoigobn,(36) which I consented to do; but know
+ not whether I shall succeed, because it is a little out of my way.
+ However, I have taken my share. Nite, MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22. I finished the rest of my letter to Lord Treasurer today, and sent it
+ to him about one o'clock; and then dined privately with my friend Mr.
+ Lewis, to talk over some affairs of moment. I had gotten the thirteenth
+ volume of Rymer's Collection of the Records of the Tower for the
+ University of Dublin.(37) I have two volumes now. I will write to the
+ Provost, to know how I shall send them to him; no, I won't, for I will
+ bring them myself among my own books. I was with Hanmer this morning, and
+ there were the Secretary and Chancellor of the Exchequer(38) very busy
+ with him, laying their heads together about the representation. I went to
+ Lord Masham's to-night, and Lady Masham made me read to her a pretty
+ twopenny pamphlet, called The St. Albans Ghost.(39) I thought I had writ
+ it myself; so did they; but I did not. Lord Treasurer came down to us from
+ the Queen, and we stayed till two o'clock. That is the best night-place I
+ have. The usual(40) company are Lord and Lady Masham, Lord Treasurer, Dr.
+ Arbuthnot, and I; sometimes the Secretary, and sometimes Mrs. Hill of the
+ bed-chamber, Lady Masham's sister. I assure oo, it im vely rate now; but
+ zis goes to-morrow: and I must have time to converse with own richar MD.
+ Nite, deelest sollahs.(41)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23. I have no news to tell you this last day, nor do I know where I shall
+ dine. I hear the Secretary is a little out of order; perhaps I may dine
+ there, perhaps not. I sent Hanmer what he wanted from me, I know not how
+ he will approve of it. I was to do more of the same sort; I am going out,
+ and must carry zis in my pottick to give it at some general post-house. I
+ will talk further with oo at night. I suppose in my next I shall answer a
+ letter from MD that will be sent me. On Tuesday it will be four weeks
+ since I had your last, N.26. This day se'nnight I expect one, for that
+ will be something more than a full month. Farewell, MD... deelest... MD MD
+ MD... ME ME ME... logues... lele.(42)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0045" id="link2H_4_0045">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 42.(1)
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, Feb. 23, 1711-12.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ After having disposed my last letter in the post-office, I am now to begin
+ this with telling MD that I dined with the Secretary to-day, who is much
+ out of order with a cold, and feverish; yet he went to the Cabinet Council
+ tonight at six, against my will. The Secretary is much the greatest
+ commoner in England, and turns the whole Parliament, who can do nothing
+ without him; and if he lives and has his health, will, I believe, be one
+ day at the head of affairs. I have told him sometimes that, if I were a
+ dozen years younger, I would cultivate his favour, and trust my fortune
+ with his. But what care oo for all this? I am sorry when I came first
+ acquainted with this Ministry that I did not send you their names and
+ characters, and then you would have relished what(2) I would have writ,
+ especially if I had let you into the particulars of affairs: but enough of
+ this. Nite, deelest logues.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24. I went early this morning to the Secretary, who is not yet well. Sir
+ Thomas Hanmer and the Chancellor of the Exchequer came while I was there,
+ and he would not let me stir; so I did not go to church, but was busy with
+ them till noon, about the affair I told you in my last. The other two went
+ away; and I dined with the Secretary, and found my head very much out of
+ order, but no absolute fit; and I have not been well all this day. It has
+ shook me a little. I sometimes sit up very late at Lord Masham's, and have
+ writ much for several days past: but I will amend both; for I have now
+ very little business, and hope I shall have no more, and I am resolved to
+ be a great rider this summer in Ireland. I was to see Mrs. Wesley this
+ evening, who has been somewhat better for this month past, and talks of
+ returning to the Bath in a few weeks. Our peace goes on but slowly; the
+ Dutch are playing tricks, and we do not push it strongly as we ought. The
+ fault of our Court is delay, of which the Queen has a great deal; and Lord
+ Treasurer is not without his share. But pay richar MD ret us know a little
+ of your life and tonvelsasens.(3) Do you play at ombre, or visit the Dean,
+ and Goody Walls and Stoytes and Manleys, as usual? I must have a letter
+ from oo, to fill the other side of this sheet. Let me know what you do. Is
+ my aunt alive yet?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oh, pray, now I think of it, be so kind to step to my aunt, and take
+ notice of my great-grandfather's picture; you know he has a ring on his
+ finger, with a seal of an anchor and dolphin about it; but I think there
+ is besides, at the bottom of the picture, the same coat of arms quartered
+ with another, which I suppose was my great-grandmother's. If this be so,
+ it is a stronger argument than the seal. And pray see whether you think
+ that coat of arms was drawn at the same time with the picture, or whether
+ it be of a later hand; and ask my aunt what she knows about it. But
+ perhaps there is no such coat of arms on the picture, and I only dreamed
+ it. My reason is, because I would ask some herald here, whether I should
+ choose that coat, or one in Guillim's large folio of heraldry,(4) where my
+ uncle Godwin is named with another coat of arms of three stags. This is
+ sad stuff to rite; so nite, MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25. I was this morning again with the Secretary, and we were two hours
+ busy; and then went together to the Park, Hyde Park, I mean; and he walked
+ to cure his cold, and we were looking at two Arabian horses sent some time
+ ago to Lord Treasurer.(5) The Duke of Marlborough's coach overtook us,
+ with his Grace and Lord Godolphin in it; but they did not see us, to our
+ great satisfaction; for neither of us desired that either of those two
+ lords should see us together. There was half a dozen ladies riding like
+ cavaliers to take the air. My head is better to-day. I dined with the
+ Secretary; but we did no business after dinner, and at six I walked into
+ the fields; the days are grown pure and long; then I went to visit
+ Perceval(6) and his family, whom I had seen but twice since they came to
+ town. They too are going to the Bath next month. Countess Doll of Meath(7)
+ is such an owl that, wherever I visit, people are asking me whether I know
+ such an Irish lady, and her figure and her foppery? I came home early, and
+ have been amusing myself with looking into one of Rymer's volumes of the
+ Records of the Tower, and am mighty easy to think I have no urgent
+ business upon my hands. My third cold is not yet off; I sometimes cough,
+ and am not right with it in the morning. Did I tell you that I believe it
+ is Lady Masham's hot room that gives it me? I never knew such a stove; and
+ in my conscience I believe both my lord and she, my Lord Treasurer, Mr.
+ Secretary, and myself have all suffered by it. We have all had colds
+ together, but I walk home on foot. Nite dee logues.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26. I was again busy with the Secretary.(8) We read over some papers, and
+ did a good deal of business; and I dined with him, and we were to do more
+ business after dinner; but after dinner is after dinner&mdash;an old
+ saying and a true, "much drinking, little thinking." We had company with
+ us, and nothing could be done, and I am to go there again to-morrow. I
+ have now nothing to do; and the Parliament, by the Queen's recommendation,
+ is to take some method for preventing libels, etc., which will include
+ pamphlets, I suppose. I don't know what method they will take, but it
+ comes on in a day or two. To-day in the morning I visited upwards: first I
+ saw the Duke of Ormond below stairs, and gave him joy of his being
+ declared General in Flanders; then I went up one pair of stairs, and sat
+ with the Duchess; then I went up another pair of stairs, and paid a visit
+ to Lady Betty; and desired her woman to go up to the garret, that I might
+ pass half an hour with her, but she was young and handsome, and would not.
+ The Duke is our President this week, and I have bespoke a small dinner on
+ purpose, for good example. Nite mi deelest logues.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27. I was again with the Secretary this morning; but we only read over
+ some papers with Sir Thomas Hanmer; then I called at Lord Treasurer's; it
+ was his levee-day, but I went up to his bed-chamber, and said what I had
+ to say. I came down and peeped in at the chamber, where a hundred fools
+ were waiting, and two streets were full of coaches. I dined in the City
+ with my printer,(9) and came back at six to Lord Treasurer, who had
+ invited me to dinner, but I refused him. I sat there an hour or two, and
+ then went to Lord Masham's. They were all abroad: so truly I came, and
+ read whatever stuff was next me. I can sit and be idle now, which I have
+ not been above a year past. However, I will stay out the session, to see
+ if they have any further commands for me, and that, I suppose, will end in
+ April. But I may go somewhat before, for I hope all will be ended by then,
+ and we shall have either a certain peace, or certain war. The Ministry is
+ contriving new funds for money by lotteries, and we go on as if the war
+ were to continue, but I believe it will not. 'Tis pretty late now, ung
+ oomens; so I bid oo nite, own dee dallars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28. I have been packing up some books in a great box I have bought, and
+ must buy another for clothes and luggage. This is a beginning towards a
+ removal. I have sent to Holland for a dozen shirts, and design to buy
+ another new gown and hat. I will come over like a zinkerman,(10) and lay
+ out nothing in clothes in Ireland this good while. I have writ this night
+ to the Provost. Our Society met to-day as usual, and we were fourteen,
+ beside the Earl of Arran,(11) whom his brother, the Duke of Ormond,
+ brought among us against all order. We were mightily shocked; but, after
+ some whispers, it ended in choosing Lord Arran one of our Society, which I
+ opposed to his face, but it was carried by all the rest against me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29. This is leap year, and this is leap day. Prince George was born on
+ this day. People are mistaken; and some here think it is St. David's Day;
+ but they do not understand the virtue of leap year. I have nothing to do
+ now, boys, and have been reading all this day like Gumdragon; and yet I
+ was dictating some trifles this morning to a printer. I dined with a
+ friend hard by, and the weather was so discouraging I could not walk. I
+ came home early, and have read two hundred pages of Arran. Alexander the
+ Great is just dead: I do not think he was poisoned; betwixt you and me,
+ all those are but idle stories: it is certain that neither Ptolemy nor
+ Aristobulus thought so, and they were both with him when he(12) died. It
+ is a pity we have not their histories. The Bill for limiting Members of
+ Parliament to have but so many places passed the House of Commons, and
+ will pass the House of Lords, in spite of the Ministry, which you know is
+ a great lessening of the Queen's power. Four of the new lords voted
+ against the Court in this point. It is certainly a good Bill in the reign
+ of an ill prince, but I think things are not settled enough for it at
+ present. And the Court may want a majority upon a pinch. Nite deelest
+ logues. Rove Pdfr.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ March 1. I went into the City to inquire after poor Stratford,(13) who has
+ put himself a prisoner into the Queen's Bench, for which his friends blame
+ him much, because his creditors designed to be very easy with him. He
+ grasped at too many things together, and that was his ruin. There is one
+ circumstance relative to Lieutenant-General Meredith(14) that is very
+ melancholy: Meredith was turned out of all his employments last year, and
+ had about 10,000 pounds left to live on. Stratford, upon friendship,
+ desired he might have the management of it for Meredith, to put it into
+ the stocks and funds for the best advantage, and now he has lost it all.
+ You have heard me often talk of Stratford; we were class-fellows at school
+ and university. I dined with some merchants, his friends, to-day, and they
+ said they expected his breaking this good while. I gave him notice of a
+ treaty of peace, while it was a secret, of which he might have made good
+ use, but that helped to ruin him; for he gave money, reckoning there would
+ be actually a peace by this time, and consequently stocks rise high. Ford
+ narrowly 'scaped losing 500 pounds by him, and so did I too. Nite, my two
+ deelest rives MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. Morning. I was wakened at three this morning, my man and the people of
+ the house telling me of a great fire in the Haymarket. I slept again, and
+ two hours after my man came in again, and told me it was my poor brother
+ Sir William Wyndham's(15) house burnt, and that two maids, leaping out of
+ an upper room to avoid the fire, both fell on their heads, one of them
+ upon the iron spikes before the door, and both lay dead in the streets. It
+ is supposed to have been some carelessness of one or both those maids. The
+ Duke of Ormond was there helping to put out the fire. Brother Wyndham gave
+ 6,000 pounds but a few months ago for that house, as he told me, and it
+ was very richly furnished. I shall know more particulars at night. He
+ married Lady Catherine Seymour, the Duke of Somerset's daughter; you know
+ her, I believe.&mdash;At night. Wyndham's young child escaped very
+ narrowly; Lady Catherine escaped barefoot; they all went to Northumberland
+ House. Mr. Brydges's(16) house, at next door, is damaged much, and was
+ like to be burnt. Wyndham has lost above 10,000 pounds by this accident;
+ his lady above a thousand pounds worth of clothes. It was a terrible
+ accident. He was not at Court to-day. I dined with Lord Masham. The Queen
+ was not at church. Nite, MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. Pray tell Walls that I spoke to the Duke of Ormond and Mr. Southwell
+ about his friend's affair, who, I find, needed not me for a solicitor, for
+ they both told me the thing would be done. I likewise mentioned his own
+ affair to Mr. Southwell, and I hope that will be done too, for Southwell
+ seems to think it reasonable, and I will mind him of it again. Tell him
+ this nakedly. You need not know the particulars. They are secrets: one of
+ them is about Mrs. South having a pension; the other about his salary from
+ the Government for the tithes of the park that lie in his parish, to be
+ put upon the establishment, but oo must not know zees sings, zey are
+ secrets; and we must keep them flom nauty dallars. I dined in the City
+ with my printer, with whom I had some small affair; but I have no large
+ work on my hands now. I was with Lord Treasurer this morning, and hat(17)
+ care oo for zat? Oo dined with the Dean to-day. Monday is parson's
+ holiday, and oo lost oo money at cards and dice; ze Givars(18) device. So
+ I'll go to bed. Nite, my two deelest logues.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. I sat to-day with poor Mrs. Wesley, who made me dine with her. She is
+ much better than she was. I heartily pray for her health, out of the
+ entire love I bear to her worthy husband. This day has passed very
+ insignificantly. But it is a great comfort to me now that I can come home
+ and read, and have nothing upon my hands to write. I was at Lord Masham's
+ to-night, and stayed there till one. Lord Treasurer was there; but I
+ thought, I thought he looked melancholy, just as he did at the beginning
+ of the session, and he was not so merry as usual. In short, the majority
+ in the House of Lords is a very weak one: and he has much ado to keep it
+ up; and he is not able to make those removes he would, and oblige his
+ friends; and I doubt too(19) he does not take care enough about it, or
+ rather cannot do all himself, and will not employ others: which is his
+ great fault, as I have often told you. 'Tis late. Nite, MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. I wish you a merry Lent. I hate Lent; I hate different diets, and
+ furmity and butter, and herb porridge; and sour devout faces of people who
+ only put on religion for seven weeks. I was at the Secretary's office this
+ morning; and there a gentleman brought me two letters, dated last October;
+ one from the Bishop of Clogher, t'other from Walls. The gentleman is
+ called Colonel Newburgh.(20) I think you mentioned him to me some time
+ ago; he has business in the House of Lords. I will do him what service I
+ can. The Representation of the House of Commons is printed:(21) I have not
+ seen it yet; it is plaguy severe, they say. I dined with Dr. Arbuthnot,
+ and had a true Lenten dinner, not in point of victuals, but spleen; for
+ his wife and a child or two were sick in the house, and that was full as
+ mortifying as fish. We have had fine mighty cold frosty weather for some
+ days past. I hope you take the advantage of it, and walk now and then. You
+ never answer that part of my letters where I desire you to walk. I must
+ keep my breath to cool my Lenten porridge. Tell Jemmy Leigh that his boy
+ that robbed him now appears about the town: Patrick has seen him once or
+ twice. I knew nothing of his being robbed till Patrick told me he had seen
+ the boy. I wish it had been Sterne that had been robbed, to be revenged
+ for the box that he lost,(22) and be p-xed to him. Nite, MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. I hear Mr. Prior has suffered by Stratford's breaking. I was yesterday
+ to see Prior, who is not well, and I thought he looked melancholy. He can
+ ill afford to lose money. I walked before dinner in the Mall a good while
+ with Lord Arran and Lord Dupplin, two of my brothers, and then we went to
+ dinner, where the Duke of Beaufort was our President. We were but eleven
+ to-day. We are now in all nine lords and ten commoners. The Duke of
+ Beaufort had the confidence to propose his brother-in-law, the Earl of
+ Danby,(23) to be a member; but I opposed it so warmly that it was waived.
+ Danby is not above twenty, and we will have no more boys, and we want but
+ two to make up our number. I stayed till eight, and then we all went away
+ soberly. The Duke of Ormond's treat last week cost 20 pounds, though it
+ was only four dishes and four, without a dessert; and I bespoke it in
+ order to be cheap. Yet I could not prevail to change the house. Lord
+ Treasurer is in a rage with us for being so extravagant: and the wine was
+ not reckoned neither; for that is always brought by him that is President.
+ Lord Orrery(24) is to be President next week; and I will see whether it
+ cannot be cheaper; or else we will leave the house...(25) Lord Masham made
+ me go home with him to-night to eat boiled oysters. Take oysters, wash
+ them clean; that is, wash their shells clean; then put your oysters into
+ an earthen pot, with their hollow sides down, then put this pot into a
+ great kettle with water, and so let them boil. Your oysters are boiled in
+ their own liquor, and not mixed water. Lord Treasurer was not with us; he
+ was very ill to-day with a swimming in the head, and is gone home to be
+ cupped, and sent to desire Lady Masham to excuse him to the Queen. Nite,
+ dee MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. I was to-day at the House of Lords about a friend's Bill. Then I
+ crossed the water at Westminster Stairs to Southwark, went through St.
+ George's Fields to the Mint, which is the dominion of the King's(26) Bench
+ Prison, where Stratford lodges in a blind alley, and writ to me to come to
+ him; but he was gone to the 'Change. I thought he had something to say to
+ me about his own affairs. I found him at his usual coffee-house, and went
+ to his own lodgings, and dined with him and his wife, and other company.
+ His business was only to desire I would intercede with the Ministry about
+ his brother-in-law, Ben Burton,(27) of Dublin, the banker, who is likely
+ to come into trouble, as we hear, about spreading false Whiggish news. I
+ hate Burton, and told Stratford so; and I will advise the Duke of Ormond
+ to make use of it, to keep the rogue in awe. Mrs. Stratford tells me her
+ husband's creditors have consented to give him liberty to get up his debts
+ abroad; and she hopes he will pay them all. He was cheerfuller than I have
+ seen him this great while. I have walked much today.&mdash;Night, deelest
+ logues.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. This day twelvemonth Mr. Harley was stabbed; but he is ill, and takes
+ physic to-day, I hear ('tis now morning), and cannot have the Cabinet
+ Council with him, as he intended, nor me to say grace. I am going to see
+ him. Pray read the Representation; 'tis the finest that ever was writ.
+ Some of it is Pdfr's style, but not very much. This is the day of the
+ Queen's accession to the Crown; so it is a great day. I am going to Court,
+ and will dine with Lord Masham; but I must go this moment to see the
+ Secretary about some businesses; so I will seal up this, and put it in the
+ post my own self. Farewell, deelest hearts and souls, MD. Farewell MD MD
+ MD FW FW FW ME ME Lele Lele Lele Sollahs lele.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0046" id="link2H_4_0046">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 43.(1)
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, March 8, 1711-12.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I carried my forty-second letter in my pocket till evening, and then put
+ it in the general post.&mdash;I went in the morning to see Lord Treasurer,
+ who had taken physic, and was drinking his broth. I had been with the
+ Secretary before, to recommend a friend, one Dr. Freind,(2) to be
+ Physician-General; and the Secretary promised to mention it to the Queen.
+ I can serve everybody but myself. Then I went to Court, and carried Lord
+ Keeper and the Secretary to dine with Lord Masham, when we drank the Queen
+ and Lord Treasurer with every health, because this was the day of his
+ stabbing.&mdash;Then I went and played pools at picquet with Lady Masham
+ and Mrs. Hill; won ten shillings, gave a crown to the box, and came home.
+ I met at my lodgings a letter from Joe, with a bit annexed from Ppt. What
+ Joe asks is entirely out of my way, and I take it for a foolish whim in
+ him. Besides, I know not who is to give a patent: if the Duke of Ormond, I
+ would speak to him; and if it come in my head I will mention it to Ned
+ Southwell. They have no patents that I know of for such things here, but
+ good security is all; and to think that I would speak to Lord Treasurer
+ for any such matter at random is a jest. Did I tell you of a race of
+ rakes, called the Mohocks,(3) that play the devil about this town every
+ night, slit people's noses, and beat them, etc.? Nite, sollahs, and rove
+ Pdfr. Nite, MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. I was at Court to-day, and nobody invited me to dinner, except one or
+ two, whom I did not care to dine with; so I dined with Mrs. Van. Young
+ Davenant(4) was telling us at Court how he was set upon by the Mohocks,
+ and how they ran his chair through with a sword. It is not safe being in
+ the streets at night for them. The Bishop of Salisbury's son(5) is said to
+ be of the gang. They are all Whigs; and a great lady sent to me, to speak
+ to her father and to Lord Treasurer, to have a care of them, and to be
+ careful likewise of myself; for she heard they had malicious intentions
+ against the Ministers and their friends. I know not whether there be
+ anything in this, though others are of the same opinion. The weather still
+ continues very fine and frosty. I walked in the Park this evening, and
+ came home early to avoid the Mohocks. Lord Treasurer is better. Nite, my
+ own two deelest MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. I went this morning again to the Lord Treasurer, who is quite
+ recovered; and I stayed till he went out. I dined with a friend in the
+ City, about a little business of printing; but not my own. You must buy a
+ small twopenny pamphlet, called Law is a Bottomless Pit.(6) 'Tis very
+ prettily written, and there will be a Second Part. The Commons are very
+ slow in bringing in their Bill to limit the press, and the pamphleteers
+ make good use of their time; for there come out three or four every day.
+ Well, but is not it time, methinks, to have a letter from MD? 'Tis now six
+ weeks since I had your Number 26. I can assure oo I expect one before this
+ goes; and I'll make shorter day's journals than usual, 'cause I hope to
+ fill up a good deal of t'other side with my answer. Our fine weather lasts
+ yet, but grows a little windy. We shall have rain soon, I dispose. Go to
+ cards, sollahs, and I to seep. Nite, MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. Lord Treasurer has lent the long letter I writ him(7) to Prior, and I
+ can't get Prior to return it. I want to have it printed, and to make up
+ this Academy for the improvement of our language. Faith, we never shall
+ improve it so much as FW has done; sall we? No, faith, ourrichar
+ gangridge.(8) I dined privately with my friend Lewis, and then went to see
+ Ned Southwell, and talk with him about Walls's business, and Mrs. South's.
+ The latter will be done; but his own not. Southwell tells me that it must
+ be laid before Lord Treasurer, and the nature of it explained, and a great
+ deal of clutter, which is not worth the while; and maybe Lord Treasurer
+ won't do it (at) last; and it is, as Walls says himself, not above forty
+ shillings a year difference. You must tell Walls this, unless he would
+ have the business a secret from you: in that case only say I did all I
+ could with Ned Southwell, and it can't be done; for it must be laid before
+ Lord Treasurer, etc., who will not do it; and besides, it is not worth
+ troubling his lordship. So nite, my two deelest nuntyes nine MD.(9)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. Here is the D&mdash;&mdash; and all to do with these Mohocks. Grub
+ Street papers about them fly like lightning, and a list printed of near
+ eighty put into several prisons, and all a lie; and I begin almost to
+ think there is no truth, or very little, in the whole story. He that
+ abused Davenant was a drunken gentleman; none of that gang. My man tells
+ me that one of the lodgers heard in a coffee-house, publicly, that one
+ design of the Mohocks was upon me, if they could catch me; and though I
+ believe nothing of it, I forbear walking late, and they have put me to the
+ charge of some shillings already. I dined to-day with Lord Treasurer and
+ two gentlemen of the Highlands of Scotland, yet very polite men. I sat
+ there till nine, and then went to Lord Masham's, where Lord Treasurer
+ followed me, and we sat till twelve; and I came home in a chair for fear
+ of the Mohocks, and I have given him warning of it too. Little
+ Harrison,(10) whom I sent to Holland, is now actually made Queen's
+ Secretary at The Hague. It will be in the Gazette to-morrow. 'Tis worth
+ twelve hundred pounds a year. Here is a young fellow has writ some Sea
+ Eclogues, poems of Mermen, resembling pastorals of shepherds, and they are
+ very pretty, and the thought is new. Mermen are he-mermaids; Tritons,
+ natives of the sea. Do you understand me? I think to recommend him to our
+ Society to-morrow. His name is Diaper.(11) P&mdash; on him, I must do
+ something for him, and get him out of the way. I hate to have any new wits
+ rise, but when they do rise I would encourage them; but they tread on our
+ heels and thrust us off the stage. Nite deelest MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. You would laugh to see our printer constantly attending our Society
+ after dinner, and bringing us whatever new thing he has printed, which he
+ seldom fails to do. Yet he had nothing to-day. Lord Lansdowne, one of our
+ Society, was offended at a passage in this day's Examiner, which he thinks
+ reflects on him, as I believe it does, though in a mighty civil way. 'Tis
+ only that his underlings cheat; but that he is a very fine gentleman every
+ way, etc.(12) Lord Orrery was President to-day; but both our dukes were
+ absent. Brother Wyndham recommended Diaper to the Society. I believe we
+ shall make a contribution among ourselves, which I don't like. Lord
+ Treasurer has yet done nothing for us, but we shall try him soon. The
+ company parted early, but Freind, and Prior, and I, sat a while longer and
+ reformed the State, and found fault with the Ministry. Prior hates his
+ Commission of the Customs, because it spoils his wit. He says he dreams of
+ nothing but cockets,(13) and dockets, and drawbacks, and other jargon
+ words of the custom-house. Our good weather went away yesterday, and the
+ nights are now dark, and I came home before ten. Night nown... deelest
+ sollahs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. I have been plagued this morning with solicitors, and with nobody more
+ than my brother, Dr. Freind, who must needs have to get old Dr.
+ Lawrence,(14) the Physician-General, turned out and himself in. He has
+ argued with me so long upon the reasonableness of it, that I am fully
+ convinced it is very unreasonable; and so I would tell the Secretary, if I
+ had not already made him speak to the Queen. Besides, I know not but my
+ friend Dr. Arbuthnot would be content to have it himself, and I love him
+ ten times better than Freind. What's all this to you? but I must talk of
+ things as they happen in the day, whether you know anything of them or no.
+ I dined in the City, and, coming back, one Parson Richardson(15) of
+ Ireland overtook me. He was here last summer upon a project of converting
+ the Irish and printing Bibles, etc., in that language, and is now returned
+ to pursue it on. He tells me Dr. Coghill(16) came last night (to) town. I
+ will send to see how he does to-morrow. He gave me a letter from Walls
+ about his old business. Nite, deelest MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. I had intended to be early with the Secretary this morning, when my
+ man admitted upstairs one Mr. Newcomb,(17) an officer, who brought me a
+ letter from the Bishop of Clogher, with four lines added by Mrs. Ashe, all
+ about that Newcomb. I think, indeed, his case is hard, but God knows
+ whether I shall be able to do him any service. People will not understand:
+ I am a very good second, but I care not to begin a recommendation, unless
+ it be for an intimate friend. However, I will do what I can. I missed the
+ Secretary, and then walked to Chelsea to dine with the Dean of Christ
+ Church,(18) who was engaged to Lord Orrery with some other Christ Church
+ men. He made me go with him whether I would or not, for they have this
+ long time admitted me a Christ Church man. Lord Orrery, generally every
+ winter, gives his old acquaintance of that college a dinner. There were
+ nine clergymen at table, and four laymen. The Dean and I soon left them,
+ and after a visit or two, I went to Lord Masham's, and Lord Treasurer,
+ Arbuthnot and I sat till twelve. And now I am come home and got to bed. I
+ came afoot, but had my man with me. Lord Treasurer advised me not to go in
+ a chair, because the Mohocks insult chairs more than they do those on
+ foot. They think there is some mischievous design in those villains.
+ Several of them, Lord Treasurer told me, are actually taken up. I heard at
+ dinner that one of them was killed last night. We shall know more in a
+ little time. I don't like them, as the men said.(19) Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. This morning, at the Secretary's, I met General Ross,(20) and
+ recommended Newcomb's case to him, who promises to join with me in working
+ up the Duke of Ormond to do something for him. Lord Winchelsea(21) told me
+ to-day at Court that two of the Mohocks caught a maid of old Lady
+ Winchelsea's,(22) at the door of their house in the Park, where she was
+ with a candle, and had just lighted out somebody. They cut all her face,
+ and beat her without any provocation. I hear my friend Lewis has got a
+ Mohock in one of the messenger's hands. The Queen was at church to-day,
+ but was carried in an open chair. She has got an ugly cough, Arbuthnot,
+ her physician, says. I dined with Crowe,(23) late Governor of Barbados; an
+ acquaintance of Sterne's.(24) After dinner I asked him whether he had
+ heard of Sterne. "Here he is," said he, "at the door in a coach:" and in
+ came Sterne. He has been here this week. He is buying a captainship in his
+ cousin Sterne's(25) regiment. He told me he left Jemmy Leigh playing at
+ cards with you. He is to give 800 guineas for his commission. I suppose
+ you know all this better than I. How shall I have room to answer oo
+ rettle(26) hen I get it, I have gone so far already? Nite, deelest logues
+ MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. Dr. Sacheverell came this morning to give me thanks for getting his
+ brother an employment. It was but six or seven weeks since I spoke to Lord
+ Treasurer for him. Sacheverell brought Trapp(27) along with him. We dined
+ together at my printer's, and I sat with them till seven. I little
+ thought, and I believe so did he, that ever I should be his solicitor to
+ the present Ministry, when I left Ireland. This is the seventh I have now
+ provided for since I came, and can do nothing for myself. I don't care; I
+ shall have Ministries and other people obliged to me. Trapp is a coxcomb,
+ and the t'other is not very deep; and their judgment in things of wit or
+ sense is miraculous. The Second Part of Law is a Bottomless Pit(28) is
+ just now printed, and better, I think, than the first. Night, my two deel
+ saucy dallars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. There is a proclamation out against the Mohocks. One of those that are
+ taken is a baronet. I dined with poor Mrs. Wesley, who is returning to the
+ Bath. Mrs. Perceval's(29) young daughter has got the smallpox, but will do
+ well. I walked this evening in the Park, and met Prior, who made me go
+ home with him, where I stayed till past twelve, and could not get a coach,
+ and was alone, and was afraid enough of the Mohocks. I will do so no more,
+ though I got home safe. Prior and I were talking discontentedly of some
+ managements, that no more people are turned out, which get Lord Treasurer
+ many enemies: but whether the fault be in him, or the Queen, I know not; I
+ doubt, in both. Ung omens, it is now seven weeks since I received your
+ last; but I expect one next Irish packet, to fill the rest of this paper;
+ but if it don't come, I'll do without it: so I wish oo good luck at ombre
+ with the Dean. Nite, nuntyes nine.(30)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. Newcomb came to me this morning, and I went to the Duke of Ormond to
+ speak for him; but the Duke was just going out to take the oaths for
+ General. The Duke of Shrewsbury is to be Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. I
+ walked with Domville and Ford to Kensington, where we dined, and it cost
+ me above a crown. I don't like it, as the man said.(31) It was very windy
+ walking. I saw there Lord Masham's children. The youngest, my nephew, I
+ fear, has got the king's evil; the other two are daughters of three and
+ four years old. 'Twas very windy walking. The gardens there are mighty
+ fine. I passed the evening at Lord Masham's with Lord Treasurer and
+ Arbuthnot, as usual, and we stayed till past one; but I had my man to come
+ with me, and at home I found three letters; one from one Fetherston, a
+ parson, with a postscript of Tisdall's to recommend him: and Fetherston,
+ whom I never saw, has been so kind to give me a letter of attorney to
+ recover a debt for him. Another from Lord Abercorn, to get him the dukedom
+ of Chatelherault(32) from the King of France; in which I will do what I
+ can, for his pretensions are very just. The third, I warrant you, from our
+ MD. 'Tis a great stir this, of getting a dukedom from the King of France:
+ but it is only to speak to the Secretary, and get the Duke of Ormond to
+ engage in it, and mention the case to Lord Treasurer, etc., and this I
+ shall do. Nite deelest richar MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. I was with the Duke of Ormond this morning, about Lord Abercorn, Dr.
+ Freind, and Newcomb. Some will do, and some will not do; that's wise,
+ marams.(33) The Duke of Shrewsbury is certainly to be your Governor. I
+ will go in a day or two, and give the Duchess joy, and recommend the
+ Archbishop of Dublin to her. I writ to the Archbishop, some months ago,
+ that it would be so, and told him I would speak a good word for him to the
+ Duchess; and he says he has a great respect for her, etc. I made our
+ Society change their house, and we met to-day at the Star and Garter in
+ the Pall Mall. Lord Arran was President. The other dog was so extravagant
+ in his bills, that for four dishes and four, first and second course,
+ without wine or dessert, he charged twenty-one pounds, six shillings, and
+ eightpence, to the Duke of Ormond. We design, when all have been
+ Presidents this turn, to turn it into a reckoning of so much a head; but
+ we shall break up when the session ends. Nite deelest MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21. Morning. Now I will answer MD's rettle, N.27; you that are adding to
+ your number and grumbling, had made it 26, and then altered(34) it to 27.
+ I believe it is above a month since your last; yes, it is above seven
+ weeks since I had your last: but I ought to consider that this was twelve
+ days right,(35) so that makes it pretty even. O, the sirry zade,(36) with
+ her excuses of a fortnight at Ballygall, seeing their friends, and
+ landlord running away. O Rold, hot a cruttle(37) and a bustle!&mdash;No&mdash;if
+ you will have it&mdash;I am not Dean of Wells,(38) nor know anything of
+ being so; nor is there anything in the story; and that's enough. It was
+ not Roper(39) sent that news: Roper is my humble slave.&mdash;Yes, I heard
+ of your resolves, and that Burton was embroiled. Stratford spoke to me in
+ his behalf; but I said I hated the rascal. Poor Catherine gone to Wales?
+ But she will come back again, I hope. I would see her in my journey, if
+ she were near the road; and bring her over. Joe(40) is a fool; that sort
+ of business is not at all in my way, pray put him off it. People laugh
+ when I mention it. Bed ee paadon, Maram; I'm drad oo rike ee aplon:(41) no
+ harm, I hope. And so... DD wonders she has not a letter at the day; oo'll
+ have it soon.... The D&mdash;&mdash; he is! married to that vengeance! Men
+ are not to be believed. I don't think her a fool. Who would have her?
+ Dilly will be governed like an ass; and she will govern like a lion. Is
+ not that true, Ppt? Why, Sterne told me he left you at ombre with Leigh;
+ and yet you never saw him. I know nothing of his wife being here: it may
+ cost her a c&mdash;-(42) (I don't care to write that word plain). He is a
+ little in doubt about buying his commission. Yes, I will bring oo over all
+ the little papers I can think on. I thought I sent you, by Leigh, all that
+ were good at that time. The author of the Sea Eclogues sent books to the
+ Society yesterday, and we gave him guineas apiece; and, maybe, will do
+ further from him (for him, I mean). So the Bishop of Clogher, and lady,
+ were your guests for a night or two. Why, Ppt, you are grown a great
+ gamester and company keeper. I did say to myself, when I read those names,
+ just what you guess; and you clear up the matter wonderfully. You may
+ converse with those two nymphs if you please, but the &mdash;&mdash;- take
+ me if ever I do. Iss, fais, it is delightful to hear that Ppt is every way
+ Ppt now, in health, and looks, and all. Pray God keep her so, many, many,
+ many years. I doubt the session will not be over till the end of April;
+ however, I shall not wait for it, if the Ministry will let me go sooner. I
+ wish I were just now in my garden at Laracor. I would set out for Dublin
+ early on Monday, and bring you an account of my young trees, which you are
+ better acquainted with than the Ministry, and so am I. Oh, now you have
+ got Number 41, have you so? Why, perhaps, I forgot, and kept it to next
+ post in my pocket: I have done such tricks. My cold is better, but not
+ gone. I want air and riding. Hold ee tongue, oo Ppt, about colds at Moor
+ Park! the case is quite different. I will do what you desire me for
+ Tisdall, when I next see Lord Anglesea. Pray give him my service. The
+ weather is warm these three or four days, and rainy. I am to dine to-day
+ with Lewis and Darteneuf at Somers's,(43) the Clerk of the Kitchen at
+ Court. Darteneuf loves good bits and good sups. Good mollows richar
+ sollohs.&mdash;At night. I dined, as I said; and it cost me a shilling for
+ a chair. It has rained all day, and is very warm. Lady Masham's young son,
+ my nephew, is very ill; and she is out of mind(44) with grief. I pity her
+ mightily. I am got home early, and going to write to the Bishop of
+ Clogher, but have no politics to send him. Nite my own two deelest saucy
+ d(ear) ones.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22. I am going into the City this morning with a friend about some
+ business; so I will immediately seal up this, and keep it in my pottick
+ till evening, and zen put it in the post. The weather continues warm and
+ gloomy. I have heard no news since I went to bed, so can say no more. Pray
+ send... that I may have time to write to...(45) about it. I have here
+ underneath given order for forty shillings to Mrs. Brent, which you will
+ send to Parvisol. Farewell, deelest deel MD, and rove Pdfr dearly dearly.
+ Farewell, MD, MD, FW, FW, FW, ME, ME, ME, Lele lele lele lele lele lele,
+ and lele aden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0047" id="link2H_4_0047">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 44.(1)
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, March 22, 1711-12.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Ugly, nasty weather. I was in the City to-day with Mrs. Wesley and Mrs.
+ Perceval, to get money from a banker for Mrs. Wesley, who goes to Bath on
+ Thursday. I left them there, and dined with a friend, and went to see Lord
+ Treasurer; but he had people with him I did not know: so I went to Lady
+ Masham's, and lost a crown with her at picquet, and then sat with Lord
+ Masham and Lord Treasurer, etc., there till past one; but I had my man
+ with me, to come home. I gave in my forty-third, and one for the Bishop of
+ Clogher, to the post-office, as I came from the City; and so oo know 'tis
+ late now, and I have nothing to say for this day. Our Mohocks are all
+ vanished; however, I shall take care of my person. Nite my own two deelest
+ nuntyes MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23. I was this morning, before church, with the Secretary, about Lord
+ Abercorn's business, and some others. My soliciting season is come, and
+ will last as long as the session. I went late to Court, and the company
+ was almost gone. The Court serves me for a coffee-house; once a week I
+ meet acquaintance there, that I should not otherwise see in a quarter.
+ There is a flying report that the French have offered a cessation of arms,
+ and to give us Dunkirk, and the Dutch Namur, for security, till the peace
+ is made. The Duke of Ormond, they say, goes in a week. Abundance of his
+ equipage is already gone. His(2) friends are afraid the expense of this
+ employment will ruin him, since he must lose the government of Ireland. I
+ dined privately with a friend, and refused all dinners offered me at
+ Court; which, however, were but two, and I did not like either. Did I tell
+ you of a scoundrel about the Court that sells employments to ignorant
+ people, and cheats them of their money? He lately made a bargain for the
+ Vice-Chamberlain's place, for seven thousand pounds, and had received some
+ guineas earnest; but the whole thing was discovered t'other day, and
+ examination taken of it by Lord Dartmouth, and I hope he will be swinged.
+ The Vice-Chamberlain told me several particulars of it last night at Lord
+ Masham's. Can DD play at ombre yet, enough to hold the cards while Ppt
+ steps into the next room? Nite deelest sollahs.(3)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24. This morning I recommended Newcomb again to the Duke of Ormond, and
+ left Dick Stewart(4) to do it further. Then I went to visit the Duchess of
+ Hamilton, who was not awake. So I went to the Duchess of Shrewsbury, and
+ sat an hour at her toilet. I talked to her about the Duke's being Lord
+ Lieutenant. She said she knew nothing of it; but I rallied her out of
+ that, and she resolves not to stay behind the Duke. I intend to recommend
+ the Bishop of Clogher to her for an acquaintance. He will like her very
+ well: she is, indeed, a most agreeable woman, and a great favourite of
+ mine. I know not whether the ladies in Ireland will like her. I was at the
+ Court of Requests, to get some lords to be at a committee to-morrow, about
+ a friend's Bill: and then the Duke of Beaufort gave me a poem, finely
+ bound in folio, printed at Stamford, and writ by a country squire. Lord
+ Exeter(5) desired the Duke to give it the Queen, because the author is his
+ friend; but the Duke desired I would let him know whether it was good for
+ anything. I brought it home, and will return it to-morrow, as the dullest
+ thing I ever read; and advise the Duke not to present it. I dined with
+ Domville at his lodgings, by invitation; for he goes in a few days for
+ Ireland. Nite dee MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25. There is a mighty feast at a Tory sheriff's to-day in the City: twelve
+ hundred dishes of meat.&mdash;Above five lords, and several hundred
+ gentlemen, will be there, and give four or five guineas apiece, according
+ to custom. Dr. Coghill and I dined, by invitation, at Mrs. Van's. It has
+ rained or mizzled all day, as my pockets feel. There are two new answers
+ come out to the Conduct of the Allies. The last year's Examiners, printed
+ together in a small volume, go off but slowly. The printer over-printed
+ himself by at least a thousand; so soon out of fashion are party papers,
+ however so well writ. The Medleys are coming out in the same volume, and
+ perhaps may sell better. Our news about a cessation of arms begins to
+ flag, and I have not these three days seen anybody in business to ask them
+ about it. We had a terrible fire last night in Drury Lane, or thereabouts,
+ and three or four people destroyed. One of the maids of honour has the
+ smallpox; but the best is, she can lose no beauty; and we have one new
+ handsome maid of honour. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26. I forgot to tell you that on Sunday last, about seven at night, it
+ lightened above fifty times as I walked the Mall, which I think is
+ extraordinary at this time of the year, and the weather was very hot. Had
+ you anything of this in Dublin? I intended to dine with Lord Treasurer
+ to-day; but Lord Mansel and Mr. Lewis made me dine with them at Kit
+ Musgrave's.(6) I sat the evening with Mrs. Wesley, who goes to-morrow
+ morning to the Bath. She is much better than she was. The news of the
+ French desiring a cessation of arms, etc., was but town talk. We shall
+ know in a few days, as I am told, whether there will be a peace or not.
+ The Duke of Ormond will go in a week for Flanders, they say. Our Mohocks
+ go on still, and cut people's faces every night; fais, they shan't cut
+ mine, I like it better as it is. The dogs will cost me at least a crown a
+ week in chairs. I believe the souls of your houghers of cattle have got
+ into them, and now they don't distinguish between a cow and a Christian. I
+ forgot to wish you yesterday a happy New Year. You know the twenty-fifth
+ of March is the first day of the year, and now you must leave off cards,
+ and put out your fire. I'll put out mine the first of April, cold or not
+ cold. I believe I shall lose credit with you by not coming over at the
+ beginning of April; but I hoped the session would be ended, and I must
+ stay till then; yet I would fain be at the beginning of my willows
+ growing. Perceval tells me that the quicksets upon the flat in the garden
+ do not grow so well as those famous ones on the ditch. They want digging
+ about them. The cherry-trees, by the river-side, my heart is set upon.
+ Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27. Society day. You know that, I suppose. Dr. Arthburnett(7) was
+ President. His dinner was dressed in the Queen's kitchen, and was mighty
+ fine. We ate it at Ozinda's Chocolate-house,(8) just by St. James's. We
+ were never merrier, nor better company, and did not part till after
+ eleven. I did not summon Lord Lansdowne: he and I are fallen out. There
+ was something in an Examiner a fortnight ago that he thought reflected on
+ the abuses in his office (he is Secretary at War), and he writ to the
+ Secretary that he heard I had inserted that paragraph. This I resented
+ highly, that he should complain of me before he spoke to me. I sent him a
+ peppering letter, and would not summon him by a note, as I did the rest;
+ nor ever will have anything to say to him, till he begs my pardon. I met
+ Lord Treasurer to-day at Lady Masham's. He would fain have carried me home
+ to dinner, but I begged his pardon. What! upon a Society day! No, no. 'Tis
+ rate, sollahs. I an't dlunk. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28. I was with my friend Lewis to-day, getting materials for a little
+ mischief; and I dined with Lord Treasurer, and three or four fellows I
+ never saw before. I left them at seven, and came home, and have been
+ writing to the Archbishop of Dublin, and cousin Deane,(9) in answer to one
+ of his of four months old, that I spied by chance, routing among my
+ papers. I have a pain these two days exactly upon the top of my left
+ shoulder. I fear it is something rheumatic; it winches(10) now and then.
+ Shall I put flannel to it? Domville is going to Ireland; he came here this
+ morning to take leave of me, but I shall dine with him to-morrow. Does the
+ Bishop of Clogher talk of coming for England this summer? I think Lord
+ Molesworth told me so about two months ago. The weather is bad again;
+ rainy and very cold this evening. Do you know what the longitude is? A
+ projector(11) has been applying himself to me, to recommend him to the
+ Ministry, because he pretends to have found out the longitude. I believe
+ he has no more found it out than he has found out mine...(12) However, I
+ will gravely hear what he says, and discover him a knave or fool. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29. I am plagued with these pains in my shoulder; I believe it is
+ rheumatic; I will do something for it to-night. Mr. Lewis and I dined with
+ Mr. Domville, to take our leave of him. I drank three or four glasses of
+ champagne by perfect teasing, though it is bad for my pain; but if it
+ continue, I will not drink any wine without water till I am well. The
+ weather is abominably cold and wet. I am got into bed, and have put some
+ old flannel, for want of new, to my shoulder, and rubbed it with Hungary
+ water.(13) It is plaguy hard. I never would drink any wine, if it were not
+ for my head, and drinking has given me this pain. I will try
+ abstemiousness for a while. How does MD do now; how does DD and Ppt? You
+ must know I hate pain, as the old woman said. But I'll try to go seep. My
+ flesh sucks up Hungary water rarely. My man is an awkward rascal, and
+ makes me peevish. Do you know that t'other day he was forced to beg my
+ pardon, that he could not shave my head, his hand shook so? He is drunk
+ every day, and I design to turn him off soon as ever I get to Ireland.
+ I'll write no more now, but go to sleep, and see whether sleep and flannel
+ will cure my shoulder. Nite deelest MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30. I was not able to go to church or Court to-day for my shoulder. The
+ pain has left my shoulder, and crept to my neck and collar-bone. It makes
+ me think of poo Ppt's bladebone. Urge, urge, urge; dogs gnawing. I went in
+ a chair at two, and dined with Mrs. Van, where I could be easy, and came
+ back at seven. My Hungary water is gone; and to-night I use spirits of
+ wine, which my landlady tells me is very good. It has rained terribly all
+ day long, and is extremely cold. I am very uneasy, and such cruel twinges
+ every moment! Nite deelest MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 31. April 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8. All these days I have been extremely
+ ill, though I twice crawled out a week ago; but am now recovering, though
+ very weak. The violence of my pain abated the night before last: I will
+ just tell you how I was, and then send away this letter, which ought to
+ have gone Saturday last. The pain increased with mighty violence in my
+ left shoulder and collar-bone, and that side my neck. On Thursday morning
+ appeared great red spots in all those places where my pain was, and the
+ violence of the pain was confined to my neck behind, a little on the left
+ side; which was so violent that I had not a minute's ease, nor hardly a
+ minute's sleep in three days and nights. The spots increased every day,
+ and bred little pimples, which are now grown white, and full of
+ corruption, though small. The red still continues too, and most prodigious
+ hot and inflamed. The disease is the shingles. I eat nothing but
+ water-gruel; am very weak; but out of all violent pain. The doctors say it
+ would have ended in some violent disease if it had not come out thus. I
+ shall now recover fast. I have been in no danger of life, but miserable
+ torture. I must not write too much. So adieu, deelest MD MD MD FW FW, ME
+ ME ME, Lele. I can say lele yet, oo see. Fais, I don't conceal a bit, as
+ hope saved.(14)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I(15) must purge and clyster after this; and my next letter will not be in
+ the old order of journal, till I have done with physic. An't oo surprised
+ to see a letter want half a side?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0048" id="link2H_4_0048">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 45.(1)
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, April 24, 1712.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I had your twenty-eighth two or three days ago. I can hardly answer it
+ now. Since my last I have been extremely ill. 'Tis this day just a month
+ since I felt a small pain on the tip of my left shoulder, which grew
+ worse, and spread for six days; then broke all out by my collar and left
+ side of my neck in monstrous red spots inflamed, and these grew to small
+ pimples. For four days I had no rest, nor nights, for a pain in my neck;
+ then I grew a little better; afterward, where my pains were, a cruel
+ itching seized me, beyond whatever I could imagine, and kept me awake
+ several nights. I rubbed it vehemently, but did not scratch it: then it
+ grew into three or four great sores like blisters, and run; at last I
+ advised the doctor to use it like a blister, so I did with melilot(2)
+ plasters, which still run: and am now in pain enough, but am daily
+ mending. I kept my chamber a fortnight, then went out a day or two, but
+ then confined myself again. Two days ago I went to a neighbour to dine,
+ but yesterday again kept at home. To-day I will venture abroad a little,
+ and hope to be well in a week or ten days. I never suffered so much in my
+ life. I have taken my breeches in above two inches, so I am leaner, which
+ answers one question in your letter. The weather is mighty fine. I write
+ in the morning, because I am better then. I will go and try to walk a
+ little. I will give DD's certificate to Tooke to-morrow. Farewell, MD MD
+ MD, ME ME, FW FW ME ME.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0049" id="link2H_4_0049">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 46.(1)
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, May 10, 1712.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I have not yet ease or humour enough to go on in my journal method, though
+ I have left my chamber these ten days. My pain continues still in my
+ shoulder and collar: I keep flannel on it, and rub it with brandy, and
+ take a nasty diet drink. I still itch terribly, and have some few pimples;
+ I am weak, and sweat; and then the flannel makes me mad with itching; but
+ I think my pain lessens. A journal, while I was sick, would have been a
+ noble thing, made up of pain and physic, visits, and messages; the two
+ last were almost as troublesome as the two first. One good circumstance is
+ that I am grown much leaner. I believe I told you that I have taken in my
+ breeches two inches. I had your N.29 last night. In answer to your good
+ opinion of my disease, the doctors said they never saw anything so odd of
+ the kind; they were not properly shingles, but herpes miliaris, and twenty
+ other hard names. I can never be sick like other people, but always
+ something out of the common way; and as for your notion of its coming
+ without pain, it neither came, nor stayed, nor went without pain, and the
+ most pain I ever bore in my life. Medemeris(2) is retired in the country,
+ with the beast her husband, long ago. I thank the Bishop of Clogher for
+ his proxy; I will write to him soon. Here is Dilly's wife in town; but I
+ have not seen her yet. No, sinkerton:(3) 'tis not a sign of health, but a
+ sign that, if it had not come out, some terrible fit of sickness would
+ have followed. I was at our Society last Thursday, to receive a new
+ member, the Chancellor of the Exchequer;(4) but I drink nothing above wine
+ and water. We shall have a peace, I hope, soon, or at least entirely
+ broke; but I believe the first. My Letter to Lord Treasurer, about the
+ English tongue,(5) is now printing; and I suffer my name to be put at the
+ end of it, which I never did before in my life. The Appendix to the Third
+ Part of John Bull(6) was published yesterday; it is equal to the rest. I
+ hope you read John Bull. It was a Scotch gentleman,(7) a friend of mine,
+ that writ it; but they put it upon me. The Parliament will hardly be up
+ till June. We were like to be undone some days ago with a tack; but we
+ carried it bravely, and the Whigs came in to help us. Poor Lady Masham, I
+ am afraid, will lose her only son, about a twelvemonth old, with the
+ king's evil. I never would let Mrs. Fenton see me during my illness,
+ though she often came; but she has been once here since I recovered.
+ Bernage has been twice to see me of late. His regiment will be broke, and
+ he only upon half-pay; so perhaps he thinks he will want me again. I am
+ told here the Bishop of Clogher and family are coming over, but he says
+ nothing of it himself. I have been returning the visits of those that sent
+ howdees(8) in my sickness; particularly the Duchess of Hamilton, who came
+ and sat with me two hours. I make bargains with all people that I dine
+ with, to let me scrub my back against a chair; and the Duchess of
+ Ormond(9) was forced to bear it the other day. Many of my friends are gone
+ to Kensington, where the Queen has been removed for some time. This is a
+ long letter for a kick(10) body. I will begin the next in the journal way,
+ though my journals will be sorry ones. My left hand is very weak, and
+ trembles; but my right side has not been touched.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ This is a pitiful letter
+ For want of a better;
+ But plagued with a tetter,
+ My fancy does fetter.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Ah! my poor willows and quicksets! Well, but you must read John Bull. Do
+ you understand it all? Did I tell you that young Parson Gery(11) is going
+ to be married, and asked my advice when it was too late to break off? He
+ tells me Elwick has purchased forty pounds a year in land adjoining to his
+ living. Ppt does not say one word of her own little health. I am angry
+ almost; but I won't, 'cause see im a dood dallar in odle sings;(12) iss,
+ and so im DD too. God bless MD, and FW, and ME, ay and Pdfr too. Farewell,
+ MD, MD, MD, FW, FW, FW. ME, ME Lele. I can say lele it, ung oomens, iss I
+ tan, well as oo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0050" id="link2H_4_0050">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 47.(1)
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, May 31, 1712.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I cannot yet arrive to my journal letters, my pains continuing still,
+ though with less violence; but I don't love to write journals while I am
+ in pain; and above all, not journals to MD. But, however, I am so much
+ mended, that I intend my next shall be in the old way; and yet I shall,
+ perhaps, break my resolution when I feel pain. I believe I have lost
+ credit with you, in relation to my coming over; but I protest it is
+ impossible for one who has anything to do with this Ministry to be certain
+ when he fixes any time. There is a business which, till it take some turn
+ or other, I cannot leave this place in prudence or honour. And I never
+ wished so much as now that I had stayed in Ireland; but the die is cast,
+ and is now a spinning, and till it settles, I cannot tell whether it be an
+ ace or a sise.(2) I am confident by what you know yourselves, that you
+ will justify me in all this. The moment I am used ill, I will leave them;
+ but know not how to do it while things are in suspense. The session will
+ soon be over (I believe in a fortnight), and the peace, we hope, will be
+ made in a short time; and there will be no further occasion for me; nor
+ have I anything to trust to but Court gratitude, so that I expect to see
+ my willows(3) a month after the Parliament is up: but I will take MD in my
+ way, and not go to Laracor like an unmannerly spraenekich ferrow.(4) Have
+ you seen my Letter to Lord Treasurer? There are two answers come out to it
+ already;(5) though it is no politics, but a harmless proposal about the
+ improvement of the English Tongue. I believe if I writ an essay upon a
+ straw some fool would answer it. About ten days hence I expect a letter
+ from MD; N.30.&mdash;You are now writing it, near the end, as I guess.&mdash;I
+ have not received DD's money; but I will give you a note for it on
+ Parvisol, and bed oo paadon(6) I have not done it before. I am just now
+ thinking to go lodge at Kensington for the air. Lady Masham has teased me
+ to do it, but business has hindered me; but now Lord Treasurer has removed
+ thither. Fifteen of our Society dined together under a canopy in an arbour
+ at Parson's Green(7) last Thursday: I never saw anything so fine and
+ romantic. We got a great victory last Wednesday in the House of Lords by a
+ majority, I think, of twenty-eight; and the Whigs had desired their
+ friends to bespeak places to see Lord Treasurer carried to the Tower.(8) I
+ met your Higgins(9) here yesterday: he roars at the insolence of the Whigs
+ in Ireland, talks much of his own sufferings and expenses in asserting the
+ cause of the Church; and I find he would fain plead merit enough to desire
+ that his fortune should be mended. I believe he designs to make as much
+ noise as he can in order to preferment. Pray let the Provost, when he sees
+ you, give you ten English shillings, and I will give as much here to the
+ man who delivered me Rymer's books:(10) he knows the meaning. Tell him I
+ will not trust him, but that you can order it to be paid me here; and I
+ will trust you till I see you. Have I told you that the rogue Patrick has
+ left me these two months, to my great satisfaction? I have got another,
+ who seems to be much better, if he continues it. I am printing a
+ threepenny pamphlet,(11) and shall print another in a fortnight, and then
+ I have done, unless some new occasion starts. Is my curate Warburton
+ married to Mrs. Melthrop in my parish? so I hear. Or is it a lie? Has
+ Raymond got to his new house? Do you see Joe now and then? What luck have
+ you at ombre? How stands it with the Dean?...(12) My service to Mrs.
+ Stoyte, and Catherine, if she be come from Wales. I have not yet seen
+ Dilly Ashe's wife. I called once, but she was not at home: I think she is
+ under the doctor's hand....(13) I believe the news of the Duke of Ormond
+ producing letters in the council of war, with orders not to fight, will
+ surprise you in Ireland. Lord Treasurer said in the House of Lords that in
+ a few days the treaty of peace should be laid before them; and our Court
+ thought it wrong to hazard a battle, and sacrifice many lives in such a
+ juncture. If the peace holds, all will do well, otherwise I know not how
+ we shall weather it. And it was reckoned as a wrong step in politics for
+ Lord Treasurer to open himself so much. The Secretary would not go so far
+ to satisfy the Whigs in the House of Commons; but there all went
+ swimmingly. I'll say no more to oo to-nite, sellohs, because I must send
+ away the letter, not by the bell,(14) but early: and besides, I have not
+ much more to say at zis plesent liting.(15) Does MD never read at all now,
+ pee?(16) But oo walk plodigiousry, I suppose; oo make nothing of walking
+ to, to, to, ay, to Donnybrook. I walk too as much as I can, because
+ sweating is good; but I'll walk more if I go to Kensington. I suppose I
+ shall have no apples this year neither, for I dined t'other day with Lord
+ Rivers, who is sick at his country-house, and he showed me all his
+ cherries blasted. Nite deelest sollahs; farewell deelest rives; rove poo
+ poo Pdfr. Farewell deelest richar MD, MD, MD, FW, FW, FW, FW, FW, ME, ME,
+ Lele, ME, Lele, Lele, richar MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0051" id="link2H_4_0051">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 48.(1)
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ KENSINGTON, June 17, 1712.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I have been so tosticated about since my last, that I could not go on in
+ my journal manner, though my shoulder is a great deal better; however, I
+ feel constant pain in it, but I think it diminishes, and I have cut off
+ some slices from my flannel. I have lodged here near a fortnight, partly
+ for the air and exercise, partly to be near the Court, where dinners are
+ to be found. I generally get a lift in a coach to town, and in the evening
+ I walk back. On Saturday I dined with the Duchess of Ormond at her lodge
+ near Sheen, and thought to get a boat back as usual. I walked by the bank
+ to Cue (Kew), but no boat, then to Mortlake, but no boat, and it was nine
+ o'clock. At last a little sculler called, full of nasty people. I made him
+ set me down at Hammersmith, so walked two miles to this place, and got
+ here by eleven. Last night I had another such difficulty. I was in the
+ City till past ten at night; it rained hard, but no coach to be had. It
+ gave over a little, and I walked all the way here, and got home by twelve.
+ I love these shabby difficulties when they are over; but I hate them,
+ because they arise from not having a thousand pound a year. I had your
+ N.30 about three days ago, which I will now answer. And first, I did not
+ relapse, but found(2) I came out before I ought; and so, and so, as I have
+ told you in some of my last. The first coming abroad made people think I
+ was quite recovered, and I had no more messages afterwards. Well, but John
+ Bull is not writ by the person you imagine, as hope!(3) It is too good for
+ another to own. Had it been Grub Street, I would have let people think as
+ they please; and I think that's right: is not it now? so flap ee hand, and
+ make wry mouth oo-self, sauci doxi. Now comes DD. Why sollah, I did write
+ in a fortnight my 47th; and if it did not come in due time, can I help
+ wind and weather? am I a Laplander? am I a witch? can I work miracles? can
+ I make easterly winds? Now I am against Dr. Smith. I drink little water
+ with my wine, yet I believe he is right. Yet Dr. Cockburn told me a little
+ wine would not hurt me; but it is so hot and dry, and water is so
+ dangerous. The worst thing here is my evenings at Lord Masham's, where
+ Lord Treasurer comes, and we sit till after twelve. But it is convenient I
+ should be among them for a while as much as possible. I need not tell oo
+ why. But I hope that will be at an end in a month or two, one way or
+ other, and I am resolved it shall. But I can't go to Tunbridge, or
+ anywhere else out of the way, in this juncture. So Ppt designs for
+ Templeoag (what a name is that!). Whereabouts is that place? I hope not
+ very far from Dublin. Higgins is here, roaring that all is wrong in
+ Ireland, and would have me get him an audience of Lord Treasurer to tell
+ him so; but I will have nothing to do in it, no, not I, faith. We have had
+ no thunder till last night, and till then we were dead for want of rain;
+ but there fell a great deal: no field looked green. I reckon the Queen
+ will go to Windsor in three or four weeks: and if the Secretary takes a
+ house there, I shall be sometimes with him. But how affectedly Ppt talks
+ of my being here all the summer; which I do not intend: nor to stay one
+ minute longer in England than becomes the circumstances I am in. I wish
+ you would go soon into the country, and take a good deal of it; and where
+ better than Trim? Joe will be your humble servant, Parvisol your slave,
+ and Raymond at your command, for he piques himself on good manners. I have
+ seen Dilly's wife&mdash;and I have seen once or twice old Bradley(4) here.
+ He is very well, very old, and very wise: I believe I must go see his
+ wife, when I have leisure. I should be glad to see Goody Stoyte and her
+ husband; pray give them my humble service, and to Catherine, and to Mrs.
+ Walls&mdash;I am not the least bit in love with Mrs. Walls&mdash;I suppose
+ the cares of the husband increase with the fruitfulness of the wife. I am
+ grad at halt(5) to hear of Ppt's good health: pray let her finish it by
+ drinking waters. I hope DD had her bill, and has her money. Remember to
+ write a due time before ME money is wanted, and be good galls, dood
+ dallars, I mean, and no crying dallars. I heard somebody coming upstairs,
+ and forgot I was in the country; and I was afraid of a visitor: that is
+ one advantage of being here, that I am not teased with solicitors. Molt,
+ the chemist, is my acquaintance. My service to Dr. Smith. I sent the
+ question to him about Sir Walter Raleigh's cordial, and the answer he
+ returned is in these words: "It is directly after Mr. Boyle's receipt."
+ That commission is performed; if he wants any of it, Molt shall use him
+ fairly. I suppose Smith is one of your physicians. So, now your letter is
+ fully and impartially answered; not as rascals answer me: I believe, if I
+ writ an essay upon a straw, I should have a shoal of answerers: but no
+ matter for that; you see I can answer without making any reflections, as
+ becomes men of learning. Well, but now for the peace: why, we expect it
+ daily; but the French have the staff in their own hands, and we trust to
+ their honesty. I wish it were otherwise. Things are now in the way of
+ being soon in the extremes of well or ill. I hope and believe the first.
+ Lord Wharton is gone out of town in a rage, and curses himself and friends
+ for ruining themselves in defending Lord Marlborough and Godolphin, and
+ taking Nottingham into their favour. He swears he will meddle no more
+ during this reign; a pretty speech at sixty-six, and the Queen is near
+ twenty years younger, and now in very good health; for you must know her
+ health is fixed by a certain reason, that she has done with braces (I must
+ use the expression), and nothing ill is happened to her since; so she has
+ a new lease of her life. Read the Letter to a Whig Lord.(6) Do you ever
+ read? Why don't you say so? I mean does DD read to Ppt? Do you walk? I
+ think Ppt should walk to(7) DD; as DD reads to Ppt, for Ppt oo must know
+ is a good walker; but not so good as Pdfr. I intend to dine to-day with
+ Mr. Lewis, but it threatens rain; and I shall be too late to get a lift;
+ and I must write to the Bishop of Clogher. 'Tis now ten in the morning;
+ and this is all writ at a heat. Farewell deelest... deelest MD, MD, MD,
+ MD, MD, FW, FW, FW, ME, ME, ME, Lele, ME, Lele, ME, Lele, ME, Lele, Lele,
+ Lele, ME.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0052" id="link2H_4_0052">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 49.(1)
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ KENSINGTON, July 1, 1712.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I never was in a worse station for writing letters than this, especially
+ for writing to MD, since I left off my journals. For I go to town early;
+ and when I come home at night, I generally go to Lord Masham, where Lord
+ Treasurer comes, and we stay till past twelve. But I am now resolved to
+ write journals again, though my shoulder is not yet well; for I have still
+ a few itching pimples, and a little pain now and then. It is now high
+ cherry-time with us; take notice, is it so soon with you? And we have
+ early apricots, and gooseberries are ripe. On Sunday Archdeacon Parnell
+ came here to see me. It seems he has been ill for grief of his wife's
+ death,(2) and has been two months at the Bath. He has a mind to go to
+ Dunkirk with Jack Hill,(3) and I persuade him to it, and have spoke to
+ Hill to receive him; but I doubt he won't have spirit to go. I have made
+ Ford(4) Gazetteer, and got two hundred pounds a year settled on the
+ employment by the Secretary of State, beside the perquisites. It is the
+ prettiest employment in England of its bigness; yet the puppy does not
+ seem satisfied with it. I think people keep some follies to themselves,
+ till they have occasion to produce them. He thinks it not genteel enough,
+ and makes twenty difficulties. 'Tis impossible to make any man easy. His
+ salary is paid him every week, if he pleases, without taxes or abatements.
+ He has little to do for it. He has a pretty office, with coals, candles,
+ papers, etc.; can frank what letters he will; and his perquisites, if he
+ takes care, may be worth one hundred pounds more. I hear the Bishop of
+ Clogher is landing, or landed, in England; and I hope to see him in a few
+ days. I was to see Mrs. Bradley(5) on Sunday night. Her youngest son is
+ married to somebody worth nothing, and her daughter was forced to leave
+ Lady Giffard, because she was striking up an intrigue with a footman, who
+ played well upon the flute. This is the mother's account of it. Yesterday
+ the old Bishop of Worcester,(6) who pretends to be a prophet, went to the
+ Queen, by appointment, to prove to Her Majesty, out of Daniel and the
+ Revelations, that four years hence there would be a war of religion; that
+ the King of France would be a Protestant, and fight on their side; that
+ the Popedom would be destroyed, etc.; and declared that he would be
+ content to give up his bishopric if it were not true. Lord Treasurer, who
+ told it me, was by, and some others; and I am told Lord Treasurer
+ confounded him sadly in his own learning, which made the old fool very
+ quarrelsome. He is near ninety years old. Old Bradley is fat and lusty,
+ and has lost his palsy. Have you seen Toland's Invitation to Dismal?(7)
+ How do you like it? But it is an imitation of Horace, and perhaps you
+ don't understand Horace. Here has been a great sweep of employments, and
+ we expect still more removals. The Court seems resolved to make thorough
+ work. Mr. Hill intended to set out to-morrow for Dunkirk, of which he is
+ appointed Governor; but he tells me to-day that he cannot go till Thursday
+ or Friday. I wish it were over. Mr. Secretary tells me he is (in) no fear
+ at all that France will play tricks with us. If we have Dunkirk once, all
+ is safe. We rail now all against the Dutch, who, indeed, have acted like
+ knaves, fools, and madmen. Mr. Secretary is soon to be made a viscount. He
+ desired I would draw the preamble of his patent; but I excused myself from
+ a work that might lose me a great deal of reputation, and get me very
+ little. We would fain have the Court make him an earl, but it would not
+ be; and therefore he will not take the title of Bullenbrook,(8) which is
+ lately extinct in the elder branch of his family. I have advised him to be
+ called Lord Pomfret; but he thinks that title is already in some other
+ family;(9) and, besides, he objects that it is in Yorkshire, where he has
+ no estate; but there is nothing in that, and I love Pomfret. Don't you
+ love Pomfret? Why? 'Tis in all our histories; they are full of Pomfret
+ Castle. But what's all this to you? You don't care for this. Is Goody
+ Stoyte come to London? I have not heard of her yet. The Dean of St.
+ Patrick's never had the manners to answer my letter. I was t'other day to
+ see Sterne(10) and his wife. She is not half so handsome as when I saw her
+ with you at Dublin. They design to pass the summer at a house near Lord
+ Somers's, about a dozen miles off. You never told me how my "Letter to
+ Lord Treasurer" passes in Ireland. I suppose you are drinking at this time
+ Temple-something's(11) waters. Steele was arrested the other day for
+ making a lottery directly against an Act of Parliament. He is now under
+ prosecution; but they think it will be dropped out of pity.(12) I believe
+ he will very soon lose his employment, for he has been mighty impertinent
+ of late in his Spectators; and I will never offer a word in his behalf.
+ Raymond writes me word that the Bishop of Meath(13) was going to summon
+ me, in order to suspension, for absence, if the Provost had not prevented
+ him. I am prettily rewarded for getting them their First-Fruits, with a p&mdash;.
+ We have had very little hot weather during the whole month of June; and
+ for a week past we have had a great deal of rain, though not every day. I
+ am just now told that the Governor of Dunkirk has not orders yet to
+ deliver up the town to Jack Hill and his forces, but expects them daily.
+ This must put off Hill's journey a while, and I don't like these stoppings
+ in such an affair. Go, get oo gone, and drink oo waters, if this rain has
+ not spoiled them, sauci doxi. I have no more to say to oo at plesent; but
+ rove Pdfr, and MD, and ME. And Podefr will rove Pdfr, and MD and ME. I
+ wish you had taken any account when I sent money to Mrs. Brent. I believe
+ I han't done it a great while. And pray send me notice when ME... to have
+ it when it is due.(14) Farewell, dearest MD FW FW FW ME ME ME.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0053" id="link2H_4_0053">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 50.(1)
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ KENSINGTON, July 17, 1712.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I am weary of living in this place, and glad to leave it soon. The Queen
+ goes on Tuesday to Windsor, and I shall follow in three or four days
+ after. I can do nothing here, going early to London, and coming late from
+ it, and supping at Lady Masham's. I dined to-day with the Duke of Argyle
+ at Cue (Kew), and would not go to the Court to-night, because of writing
+ to MD. The Bishop of Clogher has been here this fortnight: I see him as
+ often as I can. Poor Master Ashe has a sad redness in his face; it is St.
+ Anthony's fire; his face all swelled, and will break in his cheek, but no
+ danger. Since Dunkirk has been in our hands, Grub Street has been very
+ fruitful. Pdfr has writ five or six Grub Street papers this last week.
+ Have you seen Toland's Invitation to Dismal, or Hue and Cry after Dismal,
+ or Ballad on Dunkirk, or Argument that Dunkirk is not in our Hands? Poh!
+ you have seen nothing. I am dead here with the hot weather; yet I walk
+ every night home, and believe it does me good: but my shoulder is not yet
+ right; itchings, and scratchings, and small achings. Did I tell you I had
+ made Ford Gazetteer, with two hundred pounds a year salary, beside
+ perquisites? I had a letter lately from Parvisol, who says my canal looks
+ very finely; I long to see it; but no apples; all blasted again. He tells
+ me there will be a triennial visitation in August. I must send Raymond
+ another proxy. So now I will answer oo rettle N.33,(2) dated June 17. Ppt
+ writes as well as ever, for all her waters. I wish I had never come here,
+ as often and as heartily as Ppt. What had I to do here? I have heard of
+ the Bishop's making me uneasy, but I did not think it was because I never
+ writ to him. A little would make me write to him, but I don't know what to
+ say. I find I am obliged to the Provost for keeping the Bishop(3) from
+ being impertinent. Yes, Maram DD, but oo would not be content with letters
+ flom Pdfr of six lines, or twelve either, fais. I hope Ppt will have done
+ with the waters soon, and find benefit by them. I believe, if they were as
+ far off as Wexford, they would do as much good; for I take the journey to
+ contribute as much as anything. I can assure you the Bishop of Clogher's
+ being here does not in the least affect my staying or going. I never
+ talked to Higgins but once in my life in the street, and I believe he and
+ I shall hardly meet but by chance. What care I whether my Letter to Lord
+ Treasurer be commended there or no? Why does not somebody among you answer
+ it, as three or four have done here? (I am now sitting with nothing but my
+ nightgown, for heat.) Ppt shall have a great Bible. I have put it down in
+ my memlandums(4) just now. And DD shall be repaid her t'other book; but
+ patience, all in good time: you are so hasty, a dog would, etc. So Ppt has
+ neither won nor lost. Why, mun, I play sometimes too at picket, that is
+ picquet, I mean; but very seldom.&mdash;Out late? why, 'tis only at Lady
+ Masham's, and that is in our town; but I never come late here from London,
+ except once in rain, when I could not get a coach. We have had very little
+ thunder here; none these two months. Why, pray, madam philosopher, how did
+ the rain hinder the thunder from doing any harm? I suppose it ssquenched
+ it. So here comes Ppt aden(5) with her little watery postscript. O Rold,
+ dlunken srut!(6) drink Pdfr's health ten times in a morning! you are a
+ whetter, fais; I sup MD's fifteen times evly molning in milk porridge.
+ Lele's fol oo now&mdash;and lele's fol oo rettle, and evly kind of sing(7)&mdash;and
+ now I must say something else. You hear Secretary St. John is made
+ Viscount Bullinbrook.(8) I can hardly persuade him to take that title,
+ because the eldest branch of his family had it in an earldom, and it was
+ last year extinct. If he did not take it, I advised him to be Lord
+ Pomfret, which I think is a noble title. You hear of it often in the
+ Chronicles, Pomfret Castle: but we believed it was among the titles of
+ some other lord. Jack Hill sent his sister a pattern of a head-dress from
+ Dunkirk; it was like our fashion twenty years ago, only not quite so high,
+ and looked very ugly. I have made Trapp(9) chaplain to Lord Bullinbroke,
+ and he is mighty happy and thankful for it. Mr. Addison returned me my
+ visit this morning. He lives in our town. I shall be mighty retired, and
+ mighty busy for a while at Windsor. Pray why don't MD go to Trim, and see
+ Laracor, and give me an account of the garden, and the river, and the
+ holly and the cherry-trees on the river-walk?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. I could not send this letter last post, being called away before I
+ could fold or finish it. I dined yesterday with Lord Treasurer; sat with
+ him till ten at night; yet could not find a minute for some business I had
+ with him. He brought me to Kensington, and Lord Bulingbrook would not let
+ me go away till two; and I am now in bed, very lazy and sleepy at nine. I
+ must shave head and face, and meet Lord Bullinbrook at eleven, and dine
+ again with Lord Treasurer. To-day there will be another Grub,(10) A Letter
+ from the Pretender to a Whig Lord. Grub Street has but ten days to live;
+ then an Act of Parliament takes place that ruins it, by taxing every
+ half-sheet at a halfpenny. We have news just come, but not the
+ particulars, that the Earl of Albemarle,(11) at the head of eight thousand
+ Dutch, is beaten, lost the greatest part of his men, and himself a
+ prisoner. This perhaps may cool their courage, and make them think of a
+ peace. The Duke of Ormond has got abundance of credit by his good conduct
+ of affairs in Flanders. We had a good deal of rain last night, very
+ refreshing. 'Tis late, and I must rise. Don't play at ombre in your
+ waters, sollah. Farewell, deelest MD, MD MD MD FW FW ME ME ME Lele Lele
+ Lele.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0054" id="link2H_4_0054">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 51.(1)
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, Aug. 7, 1712.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I had your N.32 at Windsor: I just read it, and immediately sealed it up
+ again, and shall read it no more this twelvemonth at least. The reason of
+ my resentment at it is, because you talk as glibly of a thing as if it
+ were done, which, for aught I know, is farther from being done than ever,
+ since I hear not a word of it, though the town is full of it, and the
+ Court always giving me joy and vexation. You might be sure I would have
+ let you know as soon as it was done; but I believe you fancied I would
+ affect not to tell it you, but let you learn it from newspapers and
+ reports. I remember only there was something in your letter about ME's
+ money, and that shall be taken care of on the other side. I left Windsor
+ on Monday last, upon Lord Bolingbroke's being gone to France, and
+ somebody's being here that I ought often to consult with in an affair I am
+ upon: but that person talks of returning to Windsor again, and I believe I
+ shall follow him. I am now in a hedge-lodging very busy, as I am every day
+ till noon: so that this letter is like to be short, and you are not to
+ blame me these two months; for I protest, if I study ever so hard, I
+ cannot in that time compass what I am upon. We have a fever both here and
+ at Windsor, which hardly anybody misses; but it lasts not above three or
+ four days, and kills nobody.(2) The Queen has forty servants down of it at
+ once. I dined yesterday with Treasurer, but could do no business, though
+ he sent for me, I thought, on purpose; but he desires I will dine with him
+ again to-day. Windsor is a most delightful place, and at this time abounds
+ in dinners. My lodgings there look upon Eton and the Thames. I wish I was
+ owner of them; they belong to a prebend. God knows what was in your
+ letter; and if it be not answered, whose fault is it, sauci dallars?&mdash;Do
+ you know that Grub Street is dead and gone last week? No more ghosts or
+ murders now for love or money. I plied it pretty close the last fortnight,
+ and published at least seven penny papers of my own, besides some of other
+ people's: but now every single half-sheet pays a halfpenny to the
+ Queen.(3) The Observator is fallen; the Medleys are jumbled together with
+ the Flying Post; the Examiner is deadly sick; the Spectator keeps up, and
+ doubles its price; I know not how long it will hold. Have you seen the red
+ stamp the papers are marked with? Methinks it is worth a halfpenny, the
+ stamping it. Lord Bolingbroke and Prior set out for France last Saturday.
+ My lord's business is to hasten the peace before the Dutch are too much
+ mauled, and hinder France from carrying the jest of beating them too far.
+ Have you seen the Fourth Part of John Bull?(4) It is equal to the rest,
+ and extremely good. The Bishop of Clogher's son has been ill of St.
+ Anthony's fire, but is now quite well. I was afraid his face would be
+ spoiled, but it is not. Dilly is just as he used to be, and puns as
+ plentifully and as bad. The two brothers see one another; but I think not
+ the two sisters. Raymond writ to me that he intended to invite you to
+ Trim. Are you, have you, will you be there? Won't oo see pool Laratol?(5)
+ Parvisol says I shall have no fruit. Blasts have taken away all. Pray
+ observe the cherry-trees on the river-walk; but oo are too lazy to take
+ such a journey. If you have not your letters in due time for two months
+ hence, impute it to my being tosticated between this and Windsor. And pray
+ send me again the state of ME's money; for I will not look into your
+ letter for it. Poor Lord Winchelsea(6) is dead, to my great grief. He was
+ a worthy honest gentleman, and particular friend of mine: and, what is yet
+ worse, my old acquaintance, Mrs. Finch,(7) is now Countess of Winchelsea,
+ the title being fallen to her husband, but without much estate. I have
+ been poring my eyes all this morning, and it is now past two afternoon, so
+ I shall take a little walk in the Park. Do you play at ombre still? Or is
+ that off by Mr. Stoyte's absence, and Mrs. Manley's grief? Somebody was
+ telling me of a strange sister that Mrs. Manley has got in Ireland, who
+ disappointed you all about her being handsome. My service to Mrs. Walls.
+ Farewell, deelest MD MD MD, FW FW FW, ME ME ME ME ME. Lele, logues both;
+ rove poo Pdfr.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0055" id="link2H_4_0055">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 52.(1)
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ WINDSOR, Sept. 15, 1712.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I never was so long without writing to MD as now, since I left them, nor
+ ever will again while I am able to write. I have expected from one week to
+ another that something would be done in my own affairs; but nothing at all
+ is, nor I don't know when anything will, or whether ever at all, so slow
+ are people at doing favours. I have been much out of order of late with
+ the old giddiness in my head. I took a vomit for it two days ago, and will
+ take another about a day or two hence. I have eat mighty little fruit; yet
+ I impute my disorder to that little, and shall henceforth wholly forbear
+ it. I am engaged in a long work, and have done all I can of it, and wait
+ for some papers from the Ministry for materials for the rest; and they
+ delay me, as if it were a favour I asked of them; so that I have been idle
+ here this good while, and it happened in a right time, when I was too much
+ out of order to study. One is kept constantly out of humour by a thousand
+ unaccountable things in public proceedings; and when I reason with some
+ friends, we cannot conceive how affairs can last as they are. God only
+ knows, but it is a very melancholy subject for those who have any near
+ concern in it. I am again endeavouring, as I was last year, to keep
+ people(2) from breaking to pieces upon a hundred misunderstandings. One
+ cannot withhold them from drawing different ways, while the enemy is
+ watching to destroy both. See how my style is altered, by living and
+ thinking and talking among these people, instead of my canal and
+ river-walk and willows. I lose all my money here among the ladies;(3) so
+ that I never play when I can help it, being sure to lose. I have lost five
+ pounds the five weeks I have been here. I hope Ppt is luckier at picquet
+ with the Dean and Mrs. Walls. The Dean never answered my letter, though. I
+ have clearly forgot whether I sent a bill for ME in any of my last
+ letters. I think I did; pray let me know, and always give me timely
+ notice. I wait here but to see what they will do for me; and whenever
+ preferments are given from me, as hope saved, I will come over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. I have taken a vomit to-day, and hope I shall be better. I have been
+ very giddy since I writ what is before, yet not as I used to be: more
+ frequent, but not so violent. Yesterday we were alarmed with the Queen's
+ being ill: she had an aguish and feverish fit; and you never saw such
+ countenances as we all had, such dismal melancholy. Her physicians from
+ town were sent for, but towards night she grew better; to-day she missed
+ her fit, and was up: we are not now in any fear; it will be at worst but
+ an ague, and we hope even that will not return. Lord Treasurer would not
+ come here from London, because it would make a noise if he came before his
+ usual time, which is Saturday, and he goes away on Mondays. The Whigs have
+ lost a great support in the Earl of Godolphin.(4) It is a good jest to
+ hear the Ministers talk of him now with humanity and pity, because he is
+ dead, and can do them no more hurt. Lady Orkney,(5) the late King's
+ mistress (who lives at a fine place, five miles from hence, called
+ Cliffden(6)), and I, are grown mighty acquaintance. She is the wisest
+ woman I ever saw; and Lord Treasurer made great use of her advice in the
+ late change of affairs. I heard Lord Marlborough is growing ill of his
+ diabetes; which, if it be true, may soon carry him off; and then the
+ Ministry will be something more at ease. MD has been a long time without
+ writing to Pdfr, though they have not the same cause: it is seven weeks
+ since your last came to my hands, which was N.32, that you may not be
+ mistaken. I hope Ppt has not wanted her health. You were then drinking
+ waters. The doctor tells me I must go into a course of steel, though I
+ have not the spleen; for that they can never give me, though I have as
+ much provocation to it as any man alive. Bernage's(7) regiment is broke;
+ but he is upon half-pay. I have not seen him this long time; but I suppose
+ he is overrun with melancholy. My Lord Shrewsbury is certainly designed to
+ be Governor of Ireland; and I believe the Duchess will please the people
+ there mightily. The Irish Whig leaders promise great things to themselves
+ from his government; but care shall be taken, if possible, to prevent
+ them. Mrs. Fenton(8) has writ to me that she has been forced to leave Lady
+ Giffard, and come to town, for a rheumatism: that lady does not love to be
+ troubled with sick people. Mrs. Fenton writes to me as one dying, and
+ desires I would think of her son: I have not answered her letter. She is
+ retired(9) to Mrs. Povey's. Is my aunt alive yet? and do you ever see her?
+ I suppose she has forgot the loss of her son. Is Raymond's new house quite
+ finished? and does he squander as he used to do? Has he yet spent all his
+ wife's fortune? I hear there are five or six people putting strongly in
+ for my livings; God help them! But if ever the Court should give me
+ anything, I would recommend Raymond to the Duke of Ormond; not for any
+ particular friendship to him, but because it would be proper for the
+ minister of Trim to have Laracor. You may keep the gold-studded snuff-box
+ now; for my brother Hill, Governor of Dunkirk, has sent me the finest that
+ ever you saw.(10) It is allowed at Court that none in England comes near
+ it, though it did not cost above twenty pounds. And the Duchess of
+ Hamilton has made me pockets for (it) like a woman's, with a belt and
+ buckle (for, you know, I wear no waistcoat in summer), and there are
+ several divisions, and one on purpose for my box, oh ho!&mdash;We have had
+ most delightful weather this whole week; but illness and vomiting have
+ hindered me from sharing in a great part of it. Lady Masham made the Queen
+ send to Kensington for some of her preserved ginger for me, which I take
+ in the morning, and hope it will do me good. Mrs. Brent(11) sent me a
+ letter by a young fellow, a printer, desiring I would recommend him here,
+ which you may tell her I have done: but I cannot promise what will come of
+ it, for it is necessary they should be made free here(12) before they can
+ be employed. I remember I put the boy prentice to Brent. I hope Parvisol
+ has set my tithes well this year: he has writ nothing to me about it; pray
+ talk to him of it when you see him, and let him give me an account how
+ things are. I suppose the corn is now off the ground. I hope he has sold
+ that great ugly horse. Why don't you sell to him? He keeps me at charges
+ for horses that I never ride: yours is lame, and will never be good for
+ anything. The Queen will stay here about a month longer, I suppose; but
+ Lady Masham will go in ten days to lie in at Kensington. Poor creature,
+ she fell down in the court here t'other day. She would needs walk across
+ it upon some displeasure with her chairmen, and was likely to be spoiled
+ so near her time; but we hope all is over for a black eye and a sore side:
+ though I shall not be at ease till she is brought to bed. I find I can
+ fill up a letter, some way or other, without a journal. If I had not a
+ spirit naturally cheerful, I should be very much discontented at a
+ thousand things. Pray God preserve MD's health, and Pdfr's, and that I may
+ live far from the envy and discontent that attends those who are thought
+ to have more favour at Courts than they really possess. Love Pdfr, who
+ loves MD above all things. Farewell, deelest, ten thousand times deelest,
+ MD MD MD, FW FW, ME ME ME ME. Lele, Lele, Lele, Lele.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0056" id="link2H_4_0056">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 53.(1)
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, Oct. 9, 1712.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I have left Windsor these ten days, and am deep in pills with asafoetida,
+ and a steel bitter drink; and I find my head much better than it was. I
+ was very much discouraged; for I used to be ill for three or four days
+ together, ready to totter as I walked. I take eight pills a day, and have
+ taken, I believe, a hundred and fifty already. The Queen, Lord Treasurer,
+ Lady Masham, and I, were all ill together, but are now all better; only
+ Lady Masham expects every day to lie in at Kensington. There was never
+ such a lump of lies spread about the town together as now. I doubt not but
+ you will have them in Dublin before this comes to you, and all without the
+ least grounds of truth. I have been mightily put backward in something I
+ am writing by my illness, but hope to fetch it up, so as to be ready when
+ the Parliament meets. Lord Treasurer has had an ugly fit of the
+ rheumatism, but is now near quite well. I was playing at one-and-thirty
+ with him and his family t'other night. He gave us all twelvepence apiece
+ to begin with: it put me in mind of Sir William Temple.(2) I asked both
+ him and Lady Masham seriously whether the Queen were at all inclined to a
+ dropsy, and they positively assured me she was not: so did her physician
+ Arbuthnot, who always attends her. Yet these devils have spread that she
+ has holes in her legs, and runs at her navel, and I know not what.
+ Arbuthnot has sent me from Windsor a pretty Discourse upon Lying, and I
+ have ordered the printer to come for it. It is a proposal for publishing a
+ curious piece, called The Art of Political Lying, in two volumes, etc. And
+ then there is an abstract of the first volume, just like those pamphlets
+ which they call The Works of the Learned.(3) Pray get it when it comes
+ out. The Queen has a little of the gout in one of her hands. I believe she
+ will stay a month still at Windsor. Lord Treasurer showed me the kindest
+ letter from her in the world, by which I picked out one secret, that there
+ will be soon made some Knights of the Garter. You know another is fallen
+ by Lord Godolphin's death: he will be buried in a day or two at
+ Westminster Abbey. I saw Tom Leigh(4) in town once. The Bishop of Clogher
+ has taken his lodging for the winter; they are all well. I hear there are
+ in town abundance of people from Ireland; half a dozen bishops at least.
+ The poor old Bishop of London,(5) at past fourscore, fell down backward
+ going upstairs, and I think broke or cracked his skull; yet is now
+ recovering. The town is as empty as at midsummer; and if I had not
+ occasion for physic, I would be at Windsor still. Did I tell you of Lord
+ Rivers's will? He has left legacies to about twenty paltry old whores by
+ name, and not a farthing to any friend, dependent, or relation: he has
+ left from his only child, Lady Barrymore,(6) her mother's estate, and
+ given the whole to his heir-male, a popish priest, a second cousin, who is
+ now Earl Rivers, and whom he used in his life like a footman. After him it
+ goes to his chief wench and bastard. Lord Treasurer and Lord Chamberlain
+ are executors of this hopeful will. I loved the man, and detest his
+ memory. We hear nothing of peace yet: I believe verily the Dutch are so
+ wilful, because they are told the Queen cannot live. I had poor MD's
+ letter, N.3,(7) at Windsor: but I could not answer it then; poor Pdfr was
+ vely kick(8) then: and, besides, it was a very inconvenient place to send
+ letters from. Oo thought to come home the same day, and stayed a month:
+ that was a sign the place was agreeable.(9) I should love such a sort of
+ jaunt. Is that lad Swanton(10) a little more fixed than he used to be? I
+ think you like the girl very well. She has left off her grave airs, I
+ suppose. I am now told Lord Godolphin was buried last night.&mdash;O poo
+ Ppt! lay down oo head aden, fais I...; I always reckon if oo are ill I
+ shall hear it, and therefore hen oo are silent I reckon all is well.(11) I
+ believe I 'scaped the new fever(12) for the same reason that Ppt did,
+ because I am not well; but why should DD 'scape it, pray? She is
+ melthigal, oo know, and ought to have the fever; but I hope it is now too
+ late, and she won't have it at all. Some physicians here talk very
+ melancholy, and think it foreruns the plague, which is actually at
+ Hamburg. I hoped Ppt would have done with her illness; but I think we both
+ have that faculty never to part with a disorder for ever; we are very
+ constant. I have had my giddiness twenty-three years by fits. Will Mrs.
+ Raymond never have done lying-in? He intends to leave beggars enough; for
+ I daresay he has squandered away the best part of his fortune already, and
+ is not out of debt. I had a letter from him lately.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oct. 11. Lord Treasurer sent for me yesterday and the day before to sit
+ with him, because he is not yet quite well enough to go abroad; and I
+ could not finish my letter. How the deuce come I to be so exact in ME
+ money? Just seventeen shillings and eightpence more than due; I believe
+ you cheat me. If Hawkshaw does not pay the interest I will have the
+ principal; pray speak to Parvisol and have his advice what I should do
+ about it. Service to Mrs. Stoyte and Catherine and Mrs. Walls. Ppt makes a
+ petition with many apologies. John Danvers, you know, is Lady Giffard's
+ friend. The rest I never heard of. I tell you what, as things are at
+ present, I cannot possibly speak to Lord Treasurer for anybody. I need
+ tell you no more. Something or nothing will be done in my own affairs: if
+ the former, I will be a solicitor for your sister;(13) if the latter, I
+ have done with Courts for ever. Opportunities will often fall in my way,
+ if I am used well, and I will then make it my business. It is my delight
+ to do good offices for people who want and deserve, and a tenfold delight
+ to do it to a relation of Ppt, whose affairs she has so at heart.(14) I
+ have taken down his name and his case (not HER case), and whenever a
+ proper time comes, I will do all I can; zat's enough to say when I can do
+ no more; and I beg oo pardon a sousand times,(15) that I cannot do better.
+ I hope the Dean of St. P(atrick's) is well of his fever: he has never writ
+ to me: I am glad of it; pray don't desire him to write. I have dated your
+ bill late, because it must not commence, ung oomens, till the first of
+ November(16) next. O, fais, I must be ise;(17) iss, fais, must I; else ME
+ will cheat Pdfr. Are you good housewives and readers? Are you walkers? I
+ know you are gamesters. Are you drinkers? Are you&mdash; O Rold, I must go
+ no further, for fear of abusing fine radies.(18) Parvisol has never sent
+ me one word how he set this year's tithes. Pray ask whether tithes set
+ well or ill this year. The Bishop of Killaloe(19) tells me wool bears a
+ good rate in Ireland: but how is corn? I dined yesterday with Lady Orkney,
+ and we sat alone from two till eleven at night.&mdash;You have heard of
+ her, I suppose. I have twenty letters upon my hands, and am so lazy and so
+ busy, I cannot answer them, and they grow upon me for several months. Have
+ I any apples at Laracor? It is strange every year should blast them, when
+ I took so much care for shelter. Lord Bolingbroke has been idle at his
+ country-house this fortnight, which puts me backward in a business I have.
+ I am got into an ordinary room two pair of stairs, and see nobody, if I
+ can help it; yet some puppies have found me out, and my man is not such an
+ artist as Patrick at denying me. Patrick has been soliciting to come to me
+ again, but in vain. The printer has been here with some of the new whims
+ printed, and has taken up my time. I am just going out, and can only bid
+ oo farewell. Farewell, deelest ickle MD, MD MD MD FW FW FW FW ME ME ME ME.
+ Lele deel ME. Lele lele lele sollahs bose.(20)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0057" id="link2H_4_0057">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 54.(1)
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, Oct. 28, 1712.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I have been in physic this month, and have been better these three weeks.
+ I stop my physic, by the doctor's orders, till he sends me further
+ directions. DD grows politician, and longs to hear the peace is
+ proclaimed. I hope we shall have it soon, for the Dutch are fully humbled;
+ and Prior is just come over from France for a few days; I suppose upon
+ some important affair. I saw him last night, but had no private talk with
+ him. Stocks rise upon his coming. As for my stay in England, it cannot be
+ long now, so tell my friends. The Parliament will not meet till after
+ Christmas, and by that time the work I am doing will be over, and then
+ nothing shall keep me. I am very much discontented at Parvisol, about
+ neglecting to sell my horses, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Masham is not yet brought to bed; but we expect it daily. I dined
+ with her to-day. Lord Bolingbroke returned about two months ago, and Prior
+ about a week; and goes back (Prior I mean) in a few days. Who told you of
+ my snuff-box and pocket? Did I? I had a letter to-day from Dr. Coghill,(2)
+ desiring me to get Raphoe for Dean Sterne, and the deanery for myself. I
+ shall indeed, I have such obligations to Sterne. But however, if I am
+ asked who will make a good bishop, I shall name him before anybody. Then
+ comes another letter, desiring I would recommend a Provost,(3) supposing
+ that Pratt (who has been here about a week) will certainly be promoted;
+ but I believe he will not. I presented Pratt to Lord Treasurer, and truly
+ young Molyneux(4) would have had me present him too; but I directly
+ answered him I would not, unless he had business with him. He is the son
+ of one Mr. Molyneux of Ireland. His father wrote a book;(5) I suppose you
+ know it. Here is the Duke of Marlborough going out of England (Lord knows
+ why), which causes many speculations. Some say he is conscious of guilt,
+ and dare not stand it. Others think he has a mind to fling an odium on the
+ Government, as who should say that one who has done such great services to
+ his country cannot live quietly in it, by reason of the malice of his
+ enemies. I have helped to patch up these people(6) together once more. God
+ knows how long it may last. I was to-day at a trial between Lord Lansdowne
+ and Lord Carteret, two friends of mine. It was in the Queen's Bench, for
+ about six thousand a year (or nine, I think). I sat under Lord
+ Chief-Justice Parker, and his pen falling down I reached it up. He made me
+ a low bow; and I was going to whisper him that I HAD DONE GOOD FOR EVIL;
+ FOR HE WOULD HAVE TAKEN MINE FROM ME.(7) I told it Lord Treasurer and
+ Bolingbroke. Parker would not have known me, if several lords on the
+ bench, and in the court, bowing, had not turned everybody's eyes, and set
+ them a whispering. I owe the dog a spite, and will pay him in two months
+ at furthest, if I can. So much for that. But you must have chat, and I
+ must say every sorry thing that comes into my head. They say the Queen
+ will stay a month longer at Windsor. These devils of Grub Street rogues,
+ that write the Flying Post and Medley in one paper,(8) will not be quiet.
+ They are always mauling Lord Treasurer, Lord Bolingbroke, and me. We have
+ the dog under prosecution, but Bolingbroke is not active enough; but I
+ hope to swinge him. He is a Scotch rogue, one Ridpath.(9) They get out
+ upon bail, and write on. We take them again, and get fresh bail; so it
+ goes round. They say some learned Dutchman has wrote a book, proving by
+ civil law that we do them wrong by this peace; but I shall show by plain
+ reason that we have suffered the wrong, and not they. I toil like a horse,
+ and have hundreds of letters still to read and squeeze a line out of each,
+ or at least the seeds of a line. Strafford goes back to Holland in a day
+ or two, and I hope our peace is very near. I have about thirty pages more
+ to write (that is, to be extracted), which will be sixty in print. It is
+ the most troublesome part of all, and I cannot keep myself private, though
+ I stole into a room up two pair of stairs, when I came from Windsor; but
+ my present man has not yet learned his lesson of denying me discreetly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30. The Duchess of Ormond found me out to-day, and made me dine with her.
+ Lady Masham is still expecting. She has had a cruel cold. I could not
+ finish my letter last post for the soul of me. Lord Bolingbroke has had my
+ papers these six weeks, and done nothing to them. Is Tisdall yet in the
+ world? I propose writing controversies, to get a name with posterity. The
+ Duke of Ormond will not be over these three or four days. I desire to make
+ him join with me in settling all right among our people. I have ordered
+ the Duchess to let me have an hour with the Duke at his first coming, to
+ give him a true state of persons and things. I believe the Duke of
+ Shrewsbury will hardly be declared your Governor yet; at least, I think so
+ now; but resolutions alter very often. The Duke of Hamilton gave me a
+ pound of snuff to-day, admirable good. I wish DD had it, and Ppt too, if
+ she likes it. It cost me a quarter of an hour of his politics, which I was
+ forced to hear. Lady Orkney(10) is making me a writing-table of her own
+ contrivance, and a bed nightgown. She is perfectly kind, like a mother. I
+ think the devil was in it the other day, that I should talk to her of an
+ ugly squinting cousin of hers, and the poor lady herself, you know,
+ squints like a dragon. The other day we had a long discourse with her
+ about love; and she told us a saying of her sister Fitz-Hardinge,(11)
+ which I thought excellent, that in men, desire begets love, and in women,
+ love begets desire. We have abundance of our old criers(12) still
+ hereabouts. I hear every morning your women with the old satin and
+ taffeta, etc., the fellow with old coats, suits or cloaks. Our weather is
+ abominable of late. We have not two tolerable days in twenty. I have lost
+ money again at ombre, with Lord Orkney and others; yet, after all, this
+ year I have lost but three-and-twenty shillings; so that, considering card
+ money, I am no loser.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our Society hath not yet renewed their meetings. I hope we shall continue
+ to do some good this winter; and Lord Treasurer promises the Academy for
+ reforming our language shall soon go forward. I must now go hunt those dry
+ letter for materials. You will see something very notable, I hope. So much
+ for that. God Almighty bless you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0058" id="link2H_4_0058">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 55.(1)
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, Nov. 15, 1712.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Before this comes to your hands, you will have heard of the most terrible
+ accident that hath almost ever happened. This morning, at eight, my man
+ brought me word that the Duke of Hamilton had fought with Lord Mohun,(2)
+ and killed him, and was brought home wounded.(3) I immediately sent him to
+ the Duke's house, in St. James's Square; but the porter could hardly
+ answer for tears, and a great rabble was about the house. In short, they
+ fought at seven this morning. The dog Mohun was killed on the spot; and
+ while(4) the Duke was over him, Mohun, shortening his sword, stabbed him
+ in at the shoulder to the heart. The Duke was helped toward the cake-house
+ by the Ring in Hyde Park (where they fought), and died on the grass,
+ before he could reach the house; and was brought home in his coach by
+ eight, while the poor Duchess(5) was asleep. Maccartney,(6) and one
+ Hamilton,(7) were the seconds, who fought likewise, and are both fled. I
+ am told that a footman of Lord Mohun's stabbed the Duke of Hamilton; and
+ some say Maccartney did so too. Mohun gave the affront, and yet sent the
+ challenge. I am infinitely concerned for the poor Duke, who was a frank,
+ honest, good-natured man. I loved him very well, and I think he loved me
+ better. He had(8) the greatest mind in the world to have me go with him to
+ France, but durst not tell it me; and those he did, said I could not be
+ spared, which was true. They have removed the poor Duchess to a lodging in
+ the neighbourhood, where I have been with her two hours, and am just come
+ away. I never saw so melancholy a scene; for indeed all reasons for real
+ grief belong to her; nor is it possible for anybody to be a greater loser
+ in all regards. She has moved my very soul. The lodging was inconvenient,
+ and they would have removed her to another; but I would not suffer it,
+ because it had no room backward, and she must have been tortured with the
+ noise of the Grub Street screamers mention(ing) her husband's murder to
+ her ears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I believe you have heard the story of my escape, in opening the bandbox
+ sent to Lord Treasurer.(9) The prints have told a thousand lies of it; but
+ at last we gave them a true account of it at length, printed in the
+ evening;(10) only I would not suffer them to name me, having been so often
+ named before, and teased to death with questions. I wonder how I came to
+ have so much presence of mind, which is usually not my talent; but so it
+ pleased God, and I saved myself and him; for there was a bullet apiece. A
+ gentleman told me that if I had been killed, the Whigs would have called
+ it a judgment, because the barrels were of inkhorns, with which I had done
+ them so much mischief. There was a pure Grub Street of it, full of lies
+ and inconsistencies.(11) I do not like these things at all, and I wish
+ myself more and more among my willows.(12) There is a devilish spirit
+ among people, and the Ministry must exert themselves, or sink. Nite dee
+ sollahs, I'll go seep.(13)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. I thought to have finished this yesterday; but was too much disturbed.
+ I sent a letter early this morning to Lady Masham, to beg her to write
+ some comforting words to the poor Duchess. I dined to-(day) with Lady
+ Masham at Kensington, where she is expecting these two months to lie in.
+ She has promised me to get the Queen to write to the Duchess kindly on
+ this occasion; and to-morrow I will beg Lord Treasurer to visit and
+ comfort her. I have been with her two hours again, and find her worse: her
+ violences not so frequent, but her melancholy more formal and settled. She
+ has abundance of wit and spirit; about thirty-three years old; handsome
+ and airy, and seldom spared anybody that gave her the least provocation;
+ by which she had many enemies and few friends. Lady Orkney, her
+ sister-in-law, is come to town on this occasion, and has been to see her,
+ and behaved herself with great humanity. They have been always very ill
+ together, and the poor Duchess could not have patience when people told
+ her I went often to Lady Orkney's. But I am resolved to make them friends;
+ for the Duchess is now no more the object of envy, and must learn humility
+ from the severest master, Affliction. I design to make the Ministry put
+ out a proclamation (if it can be found proper) against that villain
+ Maccartney. What shall we do with these murderers? I cannot end this
+ letter to-night, and there is no occasion; for I cannot send it till
+ Tuesday, and the crowner's inquest on the Duke's body is to be to-morrow,
+ and I shall know more. But what care oo for all this? Iss, poo MD im sorry
+ for poo Pdfr's(14) friends; and this is a very surprising event. 'Tis
+ late, and I'll go to bed. This looks like journals. Nite.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. I was to-day at noon with the Duchess of Hamilton again, after I had
+ been with Lady Orkney, and charged her to be kind to her sister in her
+ affliction. The Duchess told me Lady Orkney had been with her, and that
+ she did not treat her as gently as she ought. They hate one another, but I
+ will try to patch it up. I have been drawing up a paragraph for the
+ Postboy, to be out to-morrow, and as malicious as possible, and very
+ proper for Abel Roper,(15) the printer of it. I dined at Lord Treasurer's
+ at six in the evening, which is his usual hour of returning from Windsor:
+ he promises to visit the Duchess to-morrow, and says he has a message to
+ her from the Queen. Thank God. I have stayed till past one with him. So
+ nite deelest MD.(16)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. The Committee of Council is to sit this afternoon upon the affair of
+ the Duke of Hamilton's murder, and I hope a proclamation will be out
+ against Maccartney. I was just now ('tis now noon) with the Duchess, to
+ let her know Lord Treasurer will see her. She is mightily out of order.
+ The jury have not yet brought in their verdict upon the crowner's inquest.
+ We suspect Maccartney stabbed the Duke while he was fighting. The Queen
+ and Lord Treasurer are in great concern at this event. I dine to-day again
+ with Lord Treasurer; but must send this to the post-office before, because
+ else I shall not have time; he usually keeping me so late. Ben Tooke bid
+ me write to DD to send her certificate, for it is high time it should be
+ sent, he says. Pray make Parvisol write to me, and send me a general
+ account of my affairs; and let him know I shall be over in spring, and
+ that by all means he sells the horses. Prior has kissed the Queen's hand,
+ and will return to France in a few days, and Lord Strafford to Holland;
+ and now the King of Spain has renounced his pretensions to France, the
+ peace must follow very soon unavoidably. You must no more call Philip,
+ Duke of Anjou, for we now acknowledge him King of Spain. Dr. Pratt tells
+ me you are all mad in Ireland with your playhouse frolics and prologues,
+ and I know not what. The Bishop of Clogher and family are well: they have
+ heard from you, or you from them, lately, I have forgot which: I dined
+ there t'other day, but the Bishop came not till after dinner; and our meat
+ and drink was very so so. Mr. Vedeau(17) was with me yesterday, and
+ inquired after you. He was a lieutenant, and is now broke, and upon
+ half-pay. He asked me nothing for himself; but wanted an employment for a
+ friend, who would give a handsome pair of gloves. One Hales sent me up a
+ letter t'other day, which said you lodged in his house, and therefore
+ desired I would get him a civil employment. I would not be within, and
+ have directed my man to give him an answer, that I never open letters
+ brought me by the writers, etc. I was complaining to a lady that I wanted
+ to mend an employment from forty to sixty pounds a year, in the Salt
+ Office, and thought it hard I could not do it. She told me one Mr.
+ Griffin(18) should do it. And afterward I met Griffin at her lodgings; and
+ he was, as I found, one I had been acquainted with. I named Filby(19) to
+ him, and his abode somewhere near Nantwich. He said frankly he had
+ formerly examined the man, and found he understood very little of his
+ business; but if he heard he mended, he would do what I desired. I will
+ let it rest a while, and then resume it; and if Ppt writes to Filby, she
+ may advise him to diligence, etc. I told Griffin positively I would have
+ it done, if the man mended. This is an account of poo Ppt's commission to
+ her most humble servant Pdfr. I have a world of writing to finish, and
+ little time; these toads of Ministers are so slow in their helps. This
+ makes me sometimes steal a week from the exactness I used to write to MD.
+ Farewell, dee logues, deelest MD MD MD,... FW FW FW ME ME ME Lele.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Smoke the folding of my letters of late.(20)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0059" id="link2H_4_0059">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 56.(1)
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, Dec. 12, 1712.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Here is now a stlange ting; a rettle flom MD unanswered: never was before.
+ I am slower, and MD is faster: but the last was owing to DD's certificate.
+ Why could it not be sent before, pay now? Is it so hard for DD to prove
+ she is alive? I protest solemnly I am not able to write to MD for other
+ business, but I will resume my journal method next time. I find it is
+ easier, though it contains nothing but where I dine, and the occurrences
+ of the day. I will write now but once in three weeks till this business is
+ off my hands, which must be in six, I think, at farthest. O Ppt, I
+ remember your reprimanding me for meddling in other people's affairs: I
+ have enough of it now, with a wanion.(2) Two women have been here six
+ times apiece; I never saw them yet. The first I have despatched with a
+ letter; the other I must see, and tell her I can do nothing for her: she
+ is wife of one Connor,(3) an old college acquaintance, and comes on a
+ foolish errand, for some old pretensions, that will succeed when I am Lord
+ Treasurer. I am got (up) two pair of stairs, in a private lodging, and
+ have ordered all my friends not to discover where I am; yet every morning
+ two or three sots are plaguing me, and my present servant has not yet his
+ lesson perfect of denying me. I have written a hundred and thirty pages in
+ folio, to be printed, and must write thirty more, which will make a large
+ book of four shillings.(4) I wish I knew an opportunity of sending you
+ some snuff. I will watch who goes to Ireland, and do it if possible. I had
+ a letter from Parvisol, and find he has set my livings very low. Colonel
+ Hamilton, who was second to the Duke of Hamilton, is tried to-day. I
+ suppose he is come off, but have not heard.(5) I dined with Lord
+ Treasurer, but left him by nine, and visited some people. Lady Betty,(6)
+ his(7) daughter, will be married on Monday next (as I suppose) to the
+ Marquis of Caermarthen. I did not know your country place had been
+ Portraine, till you told me so in your last. Has Swanton taken it of
+ Wallis? That Wallis was a grave, wise coxcomb. God be thanked that Ppt im
+ better of her disoddles.(8) Pray God keep her so. The pamphlet of
+ Political Lying is written by Dr. Arbuthnot, the author of John Bull; 'tis
+ very pretty, but not so obvious to be understood. Higgins,(9) first
+ chaplain to the Duke of Hamilton? Why, the Duke of Hamilton never dreamt
+ of a chaplain, nor I believe ever heard of Higgins. You are glorious
+ newsmongers in Ireland&mdash;Dean Francis,(10) Sir R. Levinge,(11) stuff
+ stuff: and Pratt, more stuff. We have lost our fine frost here; and Abel
+ Roper tells as you have had floods in Dublin; ho, brave(12) you! Oh ho!
+ Swanton seized Portraine, now I understand oo. Ay, ay, now I see Portraune
+ at the top of your letter. I never minded it before. Now to your second,
+ N.36. So, you read one of the Grub Streets about the bandbox.(13) The Whig
+ papers have abused me about the bandbox. God help me, what could I do? I
+ fairly ventured my life. There is a particular account of it in the
+ Postboy, and Evening Post of that day. Lord Treasurer has had the seal
+ sent him that sealed the box, and directions where to find the other
+ pistol in a tree in St. James's Park, which Lord Bolingbroke's messenger
+ found accordingly; but who sent the present is not yet known. The Duke of
+ Hamilton avoided the quarrel as much as possible, according to the foppish
+ rules of honour in practice. What signified your writing angry to Filby? I
+ hope you said nothing of hearing anything from me. Heigh! do oo write by
+ sandlelight! nauti, nauti, nauti dallar, a hundred times, fol doing so. O,
+ fais, DD, I'll take care of myself! The Queen is in town, and Lady
+ Masham's month of lying-in is within two days of being out. I was at the
+ christening on Monday. I could not get the child named Robin, after Lord
+ Treasurer; it is Samuel, after the father. My brother Ormond sent me some
+ chocolate to-day. I wish you had share of it: but they say 'tis good for
+ me, and I design to drink some in a morning. Our Society meets next
+ Thursday, now the Queen is in town; and Lord Treasurer assures me that the
+ Society for reforming the language shall soon be established. I have given
+ away ten shillings to-day to servants; 'tan't be help if one should cry
+ one's eyes out.(14) Hot a stir is here about your company and visits!
+ Charming company, no doubt; now I keep no company at all, nor have I any
+ desire to keep any. I never go to a coffee-house nor a tavern, nor have
+ touched a card since I left Windsor. I make few visits, nor go to levees;
+ my only debauching is sitting late where I dine, if I like the company. I
+ have almost dropped the Duchesses of Shrewsbury and Hamilton, and several
+ others. Lord Treasurer, the Duke of Ormond, and Lady Orkney are all that I
+ see very often. Oh yes, and Lady Masham and Lord Bolingbroke, and one or
+ two private friends. I make no figure but at Court, where I affect to turn
+ from a lord to the meanest of my acquaintance, and I love to go there on
+ Sundays to see the world. But, to say the truth, I am growing weary of it.
+ I dislike a million of things in the course of public affairs; and if I
+ were to stay here much longer, I am sure I should ruin myself with
+ endeavouring to mend them. I am every day invited into schemes of doing
+ this, but I cannot find any that will probably succeed. It is impossible
+ to save people against their own will; and I have been too much engaged in
+ patchwork already. Do you understand all this stuff? No. Well zen, you are
+ now returned to ombre and the Dean, and Christmas; I wish oo a very merry
+ one; and pray don't lose oo money, nor play upon Watt Welch's game. Nite,
+ sollahs, 'tis rate I'll go to seep; I don't seep well, and therefore never
+ dare to drink coffee or tea after dinner: but I am very seepy in a
+ molning. This is the effect of time and years. Nite deelest MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. Morn. I am so very seepy in the morning that my man wakens me above
+ ten times; and now I can tell oo no news of this day. (Here is a restless
+ dog, crying cabbages and savoys, plagues me every morning about this time;
+ he is now at it. I wish his largest cabbage were sticking in his throat.)
+ I lodge over against the house in Little Rider Street, where DD lodged.
+ Don't oo lememble, maram? To-night I must see the Abbe Gaultier,(15) to
+ get some particulars for my History. It was he who was first employed by
+ France in the overtures of peace, and I have not had time this month to
+ see him; he is but a puppy too. Lady Orkney has just sent to invite me to
+ dinner; she has not given me the bed-nightgown;(16) besides, I am come
+ very much off from writing in bed, though I am doing it this minute; but I
+ stay till my fire is burnt up. My grate is very large; two bushels of
+ coals in a week: but I save it in lodgings. Lord Abercorn is come to
+ London, and will plague me, and I can do him no service. The Duke of
+ Shrewsbury goes in a day or two for France, perhaps to-day. We shall have
+ a peace very soon; the Dutch are almost entirely agreed, and if they stop
+ we shall make it without them; that has been long resolved. One Squire
+ Jones,(17) a scoundrel in my parish, has writ to me to desire I would
+ engage Joe Beaumont to give him his interest for Parliament-man for Trim:
+ pray tell Joe this; and if he designed to vote for him already, then he
+ may tell Jones that I received his letter, and that I writ to Joe to do
+ it. If Joe be engaged for any other, then he may do what he will: and
+ Parvisol may say he spoke to Joe, but Joe's engaged, etc. I received three
+ pair of fine thread stockings from Joe lately. Pray thank him when you see
+ him, and that I say they are very fine and good. (I never looked at them
+ yet, but that's no matter.) This is a fine day. I am ruined with coaches
+ and chairs this twelvepenny weather. I must see my brother Ormond at
+ eleven, and then the Duchess of Hamilton, with whom I doubt I am in
+ disgrace, not having seen her these ten days. I send this to-day, and must
+ finish it now; and perhaps some people may come and hinder me; for it im
+ ten o'clock (but not shaving-day), and I must be abroad at eleven. Abbe
+ Gaultier sends me word I can't see him to-night; pots cake him! I don't
+ value anything but one letter he has of Petecum's,(18) showing the roguery
+ of the Dutch. Did not the Conduct of the Allies make you great
+ politicians? Fais, I believe you are not quite so ignorant as I thought
+ you. I am glad to hear oo walked so much in the country. Does DD ever read
+ to you, ung ooman? O, fais! I shall find strange doings hen I tum ole!(19)
+ Here is somebody coming that I must see that wants a little place; the son
+ of cousin Rooke's eldest daughter, that died many years ago. He's here.
+ Farewell, deelest MD MD MD ME ME ME FW FW FW, Lele.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0060" id="link2H_4_0060">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 57.(1)
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, Dec. 18, 1712.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Our Society was to meet to-day; but Lord Harley, who was President this
+ week, could not attend, being gone to Wimbledon with his new
+ brother-in-law, the young Marquis of Caermarthen, who married Lady Betty
+ Harley on Monday last; and Lord Treasurer is at Wimbledon too. However,
+ half a dozen of us met, and I propose our meetings should be once a
+ fortnight; for, between you and me, we do no good. It cost me nineteen
+ shillings to-day for my Club at dinner; I don't like it, fais. We have
+ terrible snowy slobbery weather. Lord Abercorn is come to town, and will
+ see me, whether I will or no. You know he has a pretence to a dukedom in
+ France, which the Duke of Hamilton was soliciting for; but Abercorn
+ resolves to spoil their title, if they will not allow him a fourth part;
+ and I have advised the Duchess to compound with him, and have made the
+ Ministry of my opinion. Night, dee sollahs, MD, MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. Ay mally zis is sumsing rike,(2) for Pdfr to write journals again!
+ 'Tis as natural as mother's milk, now I am got into it. Lord Treasurer is
+ returned from Wimbledon ('tis not above eight miles off), and sent for me
+ to dine with him at five; but I had the grace to be abroad, and dined with
+ some others, with honest Ben Tooke, by invitation. The Duchess of Ormond
+ promised me her picture, and coming home tonight, I found hers and the
+ Duke's both in my chamber. Was not that a pretty civil surprise? Yes, and
+ they are in fine gilded frames, too. I am writing a letter to thank her,
+ which I will send to-morrow morning. I'll tell her she is such a prude
+ that she will not let so much as her picture be alone in a room with a
+ man, unless the Duke's be with it; and so forth.(3) We are full of snow,
+ and dabbling. Lady Masham has come abroad these three days, and seen the
+ Queen. I dined with her t'other day at her sister Hill's. I hope she will
+ remove in a few days to her new lodgings at St. James's from Kensington.
+ Nite, dee logues MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. I lodge (up) two pair of stairs, have but one room, and deny myself to
+ everybody almost, yet I cannot be quiet; and all my mornings are lost with
+ people, who will not take answers below stairs; such as Dilly, and the
+ Bishop, and Provost, etc. Lady Orkney invited me to dinner to-day, which
+ hindered me from dining with Lord Treasurer. This is his day that his
+ chief friends in the Ministry dine with him. However, I went there about
+ six, and sat with them till past nine, when they all went off; but he kept
+ me back, and told me the circumstances of Lady Betty's match. The young
+ fellow has 60,000 pounds ready money, three great houses furnished, 7,000
+ pounds a year at present, and about five more after his father and mother
+ die. I think Lady Betty's portion is not above 8,000 pounds. I remember
+ either Tisdall writ to me in somebody's letter, or you did it for him,
+ that I should mention him on occasion to Lord Anglesea, with whom, he
+ said, he had some little acquaintance. Lord Anglesea was with me to-night
+ at Lord Treasurer's; and then I asked him about Tisdall, and described
+ him. He said he never saw him, but that he had sent him his book.(4) See
+ what it is to be a puppy. Pray tell Mr. Walls that Lord Anglesea thanked
+ me for recommending Clements(5) to him; that he says he is 20,000 pounds
+ the better for knowing Clements. But pray don't let Clements go and write
+ a letter of thanks, and tell my lord that he hears so and so, etc. Why,
+ 'tis but like an Irish understanding to do so. Sad weather; two shillings
+ in coaches to-day, and yet I am dirty. I am now going to read over
+ something and correct it. So, nite.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21. Puppies have got a new way of plaguing me. I find letters directed for
+ me at Lord Treasurer's, sometimes with enclosed ones to him, and sometimes
+ with projects, and some times with libels. I usually keep them three or
+ four days without opening. I was at Court to-day, as I always am on
+ Sundays, instead of a coffee-house, to see my acquaintance. This day
+ se'nnight, after I had been talking at Court with Sir William Wyndham, the
+ Spanish Ambassador(6) came to him and said he heard that was Dr. Swift,
+ and desired him to tell me that his master, and the King of France, and
+ the Queen, were more obliged to me than any man in Europe; so we bowed,
+ and shook hands, etc. I took it very well of him. I dined with Lord
+ Treasurer, and must again to-morrow, though I had rather not (as DD says);
+ but now the Queen is in town, he does not keep me so late. I have not had
+ time to see Fanny Manley since she came, but intend it one of these days.
+ Her uncle, Jack Manley,(7) I hear, cannot live a month, which will be a
+ great loss to her father in Ireland, for I believe he is one of his chief
+ supports. Our peace now will soon be determined; for Lord Bolingbroke
+ tells me this morning that four provinces of Holland(8) have complied with
+ the Queen, and we expect the rest will do so immediately. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22. Lord Keeper promised me yesterday the first convenient living to poor
+ Mr. Gery,(9) who is married, and wants some addition to what he has. He is
+ a very worthy creature. I had a letter some weeks ago from Elwick,(10) who
+ married Betty Gery. It seems the poor woman died some time last summer.
+ Elwick grows rich, and purchases lands. I dined with Lord Treasurer
+ to-day, who has engaged me to come again to-morrow. I gave Lord
+ Bolingbroke a poem of Parnell's.(11) I made Parnell insert some
+ compliments in it to his lordship. He is extremely pleased with it, and
+ read some parts of it to-day to Lord Treasurer, who liked it as much. And
+ indeed he outdoes all our poets here a bar's length. Lord Bolingbroke has
+ ordered me to bring him to dinner on Christmas Day, and I made Lord
+ Treasurer promise to see him; and it may one day do Parnell a kindness.
+ You know Parnell. I believe I have told you of that poem. Nite, deel MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23. This morning I presented one Diaper,(12) a poet, to Lord Bolingbroke,
+ with a new poem, which is a very good one; and I am to give him a sum of
+ money from my lord; and I have contrived to make a parson of him, for he
+ is half one already, being in deacon's orders, and serves a small cure in
+ the country; but has a sword at his a&mdash;- here in town. 'Tis a poor
+ little short wretch, but will do best in a gown, and we will make Lord
+ Keeper give him a living. Lord Bolingbroke writ to Lord Treasurer to
+ excuse me to-day; so I dined with the former, and Monteleon, the Spanish
+ Ambassador, who made me many compliments. I stayed till nine, and now it
+ is past ten, and my man has locked me up, and I have just called to mind
+ that I shall be in disgrace with Tom Leigh.(13) That coxcomb had got into
+ acquaintance with one Eckershall,(14) Clerk of the Kitchen to the Queen,
+ who was civil to him at Windsor on my account; for I had done some service
+ to Eckershall. Leigh teases me to pass an evening at his lodgings with
+ Eckershall. I put it off several times, but was forced at last to promise
+ I would come to-night; and it never was in my head till I was locked up,
+ and I have called and called, but my man is gone to bed; so I will write
+ an excuse to-morrow. I detest that Tom Leigh, and am as formal to him as I
+ can when I happen to meet him in the Park. The rogue frets me, if he knew
+ it. He asked me why I did not wait on the Bishop of Dromore.(15) I
+ answered I had not the honour to be acquainted with him, and would not
+ presume, etc. He takes me seriously, and says the Bishop is no proud man,
+ etc. He tells me of a judge in Ireland that has done ill things. I ask why
+ he is not out? Says he, "I think the bishops, and you, and I, and the rest
+ of the clergy, should meet and consult about it." I beg his pardon, and
+ say, "I cannot be serviceable that way." He answers, "Yes, everybody may
+ help something."&mdash;Don't you see how curiously he contrives to vex me;
+ for the dog knows that with half a word I could do more than all of them
+ together. But he only does it from the pride and envy of his own heart,
+ and not out of a humorous design of teasing. He is one of those that would
+ rather a service should not be done, than done by a private man, and of
+ his own country. You take all this, don't you? Nite dee sollahs, I'll go
+ seep a dozey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24. I dined to-day with the Chancellor of the Exchequer, in order to look
+ over some of my papers; but nothing was done. I have been also mediating
+ between the Hamilton family and Lord Abercorn, to have them compound with
+ him; and I believe they will do it. Lord Selkirk,(16) the late Duke's
+ brother, is to be in town, in order to go to France, to make the demands;
+ and the Ministry are of opinion they will get some satisfaction, and they
+ empowered me to advise the Hamilton side to agree with Abercorn, who asks
+ a fourth part, and will go to France and spoil all if they won't yield it.
+ Nite sollahs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25. All melly Titmasses&mdash;melly Titmasses&mdash;I said it first&mdash;I
+ wish it a souzand (times) zoth with halt(17) and soul.(18) I carried
+ Parnell to dine at Lord Bolingbroke's, and he behaved himself very well;
+ and Lord Bolingbroke is mightily pleased with him. I was at St. James's
+ Chapel by eight this morning; and church and sacrament were done by ten.
+ The Queen has the gout in her hand, and did not come to church today; and
+ I stayed so long in my chamber that I missed going to Court. Did I tell
+ you that the Queen designs to have a Drawing-room and company every day?
+ Nite dee logues.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26. I was to wish the Duke of Ormond a happy Christmas, and give half a
+ crown to his porter. It will cost me a dozen half-crowns among such
+ fellows. I dined with Lord Treasurer, who chid me for being absent three
+ days. Mighty kind, with a p&mdash;; less of civility, and more of his
+ interest! We hear Maccartney is gone over to Ireland. Was it not comical
+ for a gentleman to be set upon by highwaymen, and to tell them he was
+ Maccartney? Upon which they brought him to a justice of peace, in hopes of
+ the reward,(19) and the rogues were sent to gaol. Was it not great
+ presence of mind? But maybe you heard this already; for there was a Grub
+ Street of it. Lord Bolingbroke told me I must walk away to-day when dinner
+ was done, because Lord Treasurer, and he, and another, were to enter upon
+ business; but I said it was as fit I should know their business as
+ anybody, for I was to justify (it).(20) So the rest went, and I stayed,
+ and it was so important, I was like to sleep over it. I left them at nine,
+ and it is now twelve. Nite, MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27. I dined to-day with General Hill, Governor of Dunkirk. Lady Masham and
+ Mrs. Hill, his two sisters, were of the company, and there have I been
+ sitting this evening till eleven, looking over others at play; for I have
+ left off loving play myself; and I think Ppt is now a great gamester. I
+ have a great cold on me, not quite at its height. I have them seldom, and
+ therefore ought to be patient. I met Mr. Addison and Pastoral Philips on
+ the Mall to-day, and took a turn with them; but they both looked terrible
+ dry and cold. A curse of party! And do you know I have taken more pains to
+ recommend the Whig wits to the favour and mercy of the Ministers than any
+ other people. Steele I have kept in his place. Congreve I have got to be
+ used kindly, and secured. Rowe I have recommended, and got a promise of a
+ place. Philips I could certainly have provided for, if he had not run
+ party mad, and made me withdraw my recommendation; and I set Addison so
+ right at first that he might have been employed, and have partly secured
+ him the place he has; yet I am worse used by that faction than any man.
+ Well, go to cards, sollah Ppt, and dress the wine and olange, sollah MD,
+ and I'll go seep. 'Tis rate. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28. My cold is so bad that I could not go to church today, nor to Court;
+ but I was engaged to Lord Orkney's with the Duke of Ormond, at dinner; and
+ ventured, because I could cough and spit there as I pleased. The Duke and
+ Lord Arran left us, and I have been sitting ever since with Lord and Lady
+ Orkney till past eleven: and my cold is worse, and makes me giddy. I hope
+ it is only my cold. Oh, says Ppt, everybody is giddy with a cold; I hope
+ it is no more; but I'll go to bed, for the fellow has bawled "Past
+ twelve." Night, deels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29. I got out early to-day, and escaped all my duns. I went to see Lord
+ Bolingbroke about some business, and truly he was gone out too. I dined in
+ the City upon the broiled leg of a goose and a bit of brawn, with my
+ printer. Did I tell you that I forbear printing what I have in hand, till
+ the Court decides something about me? I will contract no more enemies, at
+ least I will not embitter worse those I have already, till I have got
+ under shelter; and the Ministers know my resolution, so that you may be
+ disappointed in seeing this thing as soon as you expected. I hear Lord
+ Treasurer is out of order. My cold is very bad. Every(body) has one. Nite
+ two dee logues.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30. I suppose this will be full by Saturday; zen(21) it sall go. Duke of
+ Ormond, Lord Arran, and I, dined privately to-day at an old servant's
+ house of his. The Council made us part at six. One Mrs. Ramsay dined with
+ us; an old lady of about fifty-five, that we are all very fond of. I
+ called this evening at Lord Treasurer's, and sat with him two hours. He
+ has been cupped for a cold, and has been very ill. He cannot dine with
+ Parnell and me at Lord Bolingbroke's to-morrow, but says he will see
+ Parnell some other time. I hoise(22) up Parnell partly to spite the
+ envious Irish folks here, particularly Tom Leigh. I saw the Bishop of
+ Clogher's family to-day; Miss is mighty ill of a cold, coughs
+ incessantly.(23) Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 31. To-day Parnell and I dined with Lord Bolingbroke, to correct Parnell's
+ poem. I made him show all the places he disliked; and when Parnell has
+ corrected it fully he shall print it. I went this evening to sit with Lord
+ Treasurer. He is better, and will be out in a day or two. I sat with him
+ while the young folks went to supper; and then went down, and there were
+ the young folks merry together, having turned Lady Oxford up to my lord,
+ and I stayed with them till twelve. There was the young couple, Lord and
+ Lady Caermarthen, and Lord and Lady Dupplin, and Lord Harley and I; and
+ the old folks were together above. It looked like what I have formerly
+ done so often; stealing together from the old folks, though indeed it was
+ not from poor Lord Treasurer, who is as young a fellow as any of us: but
+ Lady Oxford is a silly mere old woman.(24) My cold is still so bad that I
+ have not the least smelling. I am just got home, and 'tis past twelve; and
+ I'll go to bed, and settle my head, heavy as lead. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jan. 1, 1712-13. A sousand melly new eels(25) to deelest richar MD. Pray
+ God Almighty bless you, and send you ever happy! I forgot to tell you that
+ yesterday Lord Abercorn was here, teasing me about his French duchy, and
+ suspecting my partiality to the Hamilton family in such a whimsical manner
+ that Dr. Pratt, who was by, thought he was mad. He was no sooner gone but
+ Lord Orkney sent to know whether he might come and sit with me half an
+ hour upon some business. I returned answer that I would wait on him; which
+ I did. We discoursed a while, and he left me with Lady Orkney; and in came
+ the Earl of Selkirk, whom I had never seen before. He is another brother
+ of the Duke of Hamilton, and is going to France, by a power from his
+ mother, the old Duchess,(26) to negotiate their pretensions to the duchy
+ of Chatelherault. He teased me for two hours in spite of my teeth, and
+ held my hand when I offered to stir; would have had me engage the Ministry
+ to favour him against Lord Abercorn, and to convince them that Lord
+ Abercorn had no pretensions; and desired I would also convince Lord
+ Abercorn himself so; and concluded he was sorry I was a greater friend to
+ Abercorn than Hamilton. I had no patience, and used him with some
+ plainness. Am not I purely handled between a couple of puppies? Ay, says
+ Ppt, you must be meddling in other folks' affairs. I appeal to the Bishop
+ of Clogher whether Abercorn did not complain that I would not let him see
+ me last year, and that he swore he would take no denial from my servant
+ when he came again. The Ministers gave me leave to tell the Hamilton
+ family it was their opinion that they ought to agree with Abercorn. Lord
+ Anglesea was then by, and told Abercorn; upon which he gravely tells me I
+ was commissioned by the Ministers, and ought to perform my commission,
+ etc.&mdash;But I'll have done with them. I have warned Lord Treasurer and
+ Lord Bolingbroke to beware of Selkirk's teasing; &mdash;x on him! Yet
+ Abercorn vexes me more. The whelp owes to me all the kind receptions he
+ has had from the Ministry. I dined to-day at Lord Treasurer's with the
+ young folks, and sat with Lord Treasurer till nine, and then was forced to
+ Lady Masham's, and sat there till twelve, talking of affairs, till I am
+ out of humour, as everyone must that knows them inwardly. A thousand
+ things wrong, most of them easy to mend; yet our schemes availing at best
+ but little, and sometimes nothing at all. One evil, which I twice patched
+ up with the hazard of all the credit I had, is now spread more than
+ ever.(27) But burn politics, and send me from Courts and Ministers! Nite
+ deelest richar MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. I sauntered about this morning, and went with Dr. Pratt to a picture
+ auction, where I had like to be drawn in to buy a picture that I was fond
+ of, but, it seems, was good for nothing. Pratt was there to buy some
+ pictures for the Bishop of Clogher, who resolves to lay out ten pounds to
+ furnish his house with curious pieces. We dined with the Bishop, I being
+ by chance disengaged. And this evening I sat with the Bishop of
+ Ossory,(28) who is laid up with the gout. The French Ambassador, Duke
+ d'Aumont,(29) came to town to-night; and the rabble conducted him home
+ with shouts. I cannot smell yet, though my cold begins to break. It
+ continues cruel hard frosty weather. Go and be melly,... sollahs.(30)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. Lord Dupplin and I went with Lord and Lady Orkney this morning at ten
+ to Wimbledon, six miles off, to see Lord and Lady Caermarthen. It is much
+ the finest place about this town. Did oo never see it? I was once there
+ before, about five years ago. You know Lady Caermarthen is Lord
+ Treasurer's daughter, married about three weeks ago. I hope the young
+ fellow will be a good husband.&mdash;I must send this away now. I came
+ back just by nightfall, cruel cold weather; I have no smell yet, but my
+ cold something better. Nite (?) sollahs; I'll take my reeve. I forget how
+ MD's accounts are. Pray let me know always timely before MD wants; and
+ pray give the bill on t'other side to Mrs. Brent as usual. I believe I
+ have not paid her this great while. Go, play cards, and... rove Pdfr. Nite
+ richar MD... roves Pdfr. FW lele.. . MD MD MD MD MD FW FW FW FW MD MD
+ Lele...(31)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The six odd shillings, tell Mrs. Brent, are for her new year's gift.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I(32) am just now told that poor dear Lady Ashburnham,(33) the Duke of
+ Ormond's daughter, died yesterday at her country house. The poor creature
+ was with child. She was my greatest favourite, and I am in excessive
+ concern for her loss. I hardly knew a more valuable person on all
+ accounts. You must have heard me talk of her. I am afraid to see the Duke
+ and Duchess. She was naturally very healthy; I am afraid she has been
+ thrown away for want of care. Pray condole with me. 'Tis extremely moving.
+ Her lord's a puppy; and I shall never think it worth my while to be
+ troubled with him, now he has lost all that was valuable in his
+ possession; yet I think he used her pretty well. I hate life when I think
+ it exposed to such accidents; and to see so many thousand wretches
+ burdening the earth, while such as her die, makes me think God did never
+ intend life for a blessing. Farewell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0061" id="link2H_4_0061">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 58.(1)
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, Jan. 4, 1712-13.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I ended my last with the melancholy news of poor Lady Ashburnham's death.
+ The Bishop of Clogher and Dr. Pratt made me dine with them to-day at Lord
+ Mountjoy's, pursuant to an engagement, which I had forgot. Lady Mountjoy
+ told me that Maccartney was got safe out of our clutches, for she had
+ spoke with one who had a letter from him from Holland. Others say the same
+ thing. 'Tis hard such a dog should escape.&mdash;As I left Lord Mountjoy's
+ I saw the Duke d'Aumont, the French Ambassador, going from Lord
+ Bolingbroke's, where he dined, to have a private audience of the Queen. I
+ followed, and went up to Court, where there was a great crowd. I was
+ talking with the Duke of Argyle by the fireside in the bed-chamber, when
+ the Ambassador came out from the Queen. Argyle presented me to him, and
+ Lord Bolingbroke and we talked together a while. He is a fine gentleman,
+ something like the Duke of Ormond, and just such an expensive man. After
+ church to-day I showed the Bishop of Clogher, at Court, who was who. Nite
+ my two dee logues, and...(2)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. Our frost is broke, but it is bloody cold. Lord Treasurer is recovered,
+ and went out this evening to the Queen. I dined with Lady Oxford, and then
+ sat with Lord Treasurer while he went out. He gave me a letter from an
+ unknown hand, relating to Dr. Brown,(3) Bishop of Cork, recommending him
+ to a better bishopric, as a person who opposed Lord Wharton, and was made
+ a bishop on that account, celebrating him for a great politician, etc.: in
+ short, all directly contrary to his character, which I made bold to
+ explain. What dogs there are in the world! I was to see the poor Duke and
+ Duchess of Ormond this morning. The Duke was in his public room, with Mr.
+ Southwell(4) and two more gentlemen. When Southwell and I were alone with
+ him, he talked something of Lord Ashburnham, that he was afraid the Whigs
+ would get him again. He bore up as well as he could, but something falling
+ accidentally in discourse, the tears were just falling out of his eyes,
+ and I looked off to give him an opportunity (which he took) of wiping them
+ with his handkerchief. I never saw anything so moving, nor such a mixture
+ of greatness of mind, and tenderness, and discretion. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. Lord Bolingbroke and Parnell and I dined, by invitation, with my friend
+ Darteneuf,(5) whom you have heard me talk of. Lord Bolingbroke likes
+ Parnell mightily; and it is pleasant to see that one who hardly passed for
+ anything in Ireland makes his way here with a little friendly forwarding.
+ It is scurvy rainy weather, and I have hardly been abroad to-day, nor know
+ anything that passes.&mdash;Lord Treasurer is quite recovered, and I hope
+ will be careful to keep himself well. The Duchess of Marlborough is
+ leaving England to go to her Duke, and makes presents of rings to several
+ friends, they say worth two hundred pounds apiece. I am sure she ought to
+ give me one, though the Duke pretended to think me his greatest enemy, and
+ got people to tell me so, and very mildly to let me know how gladly he
+ would have me softened toward him. I bid a lady of his acquaintance and
+ mine let him know that I had hindered many a bitter thing against him; not
+ for his own sake, but because I thought it looked base; and I desired
+ everything should be left him, except power. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. I dined with Lord and Lady Masham to-day, and this evening played at
+ ombre with Mrs. Vanhom, merely for amusement. The Ministers have got my
+ papers, and will neither read them nor give them to me; and I can hardly
+ do anything. Very warm slabby weather, but I made a shift to get a walk;
+ yet I lost half of it, by shaking off Lord Rochester,(6) who is a good,
+ civil, simple man. The Bishop of Ossory will not be Bishop of Hereford,(7)
+ to the great grief of himself and his wife. And hat is MD doing now, I
+ wonder? Playing at cards with the Dean and Mrs. Walls? I think it is not
+ certain yet that Maccartney is escaped. I am plagued with bad authors,
+ verse and prose, who send me their books and poems, the vilest trash I
+ ever saw; but I have given their names to my man, never to let them see
+ me. I have got new ink, and 'tis very white; and I don't see that it turns
+ black at all. I'll go to seep; 'tis past twelve.&mdash;Nite, MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. Oo must understand that I am in my geers, and have got a chocolate-pot,
+ a present from Mrs. Ashe of Clogher, and some chocolate from my brother
+ Ormond, and I treat folks sometimes. I dined with Lord Treasurer at five
+ o'clock to-day, and was by while he and Lord Bolingbroke were at business;
+ for it is fit I should know all that passes now, because, etc. The Duke of
+ Ormond employed me to speak to Lord Treasurer to-day about an affair, and
+ I did so; and the Duke had spoke himself two hours before, which vexed me,
+ and I will chide the Duke about it. I'll tell you a good thing; there is
+ not one of the Ministry but what will employ me as gravely to speak for
+ them to Lord Treasurer as if I were their brother or his; and I do it as
+ gravely: though I know they do it only because they will not make
+ themselves uneasy, or had rather I should be denied than they. I believe
+ our peace will not be finished these two months; for I think we must have
+ a return from Spain by a messenger, who will not go till Sunday next. Lord
+ Treasurer has invited me to dine with him again to-morrow. Your
+ Commissioner, Keatley,(8) is to be there. Nite dee richar MD.(9)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. Dr. Pratt drank chocolate with me this morning, and then we walked. I
+ was yesterday with him to see Lady Betty Butler, grieving for her sister
+ Ashburnham. The jade was in bed in form, and she did so cant, she made me
+ sick. I meet Tom Leigh every day in the Park, to preserve his health. He
+ is as ruddy as a rose, and tells me his Bishop of Dromore(10) recovers
+ very much. That Bishop has been very near dying. This day's Examiner talks
+ of the play of "What is it like?"(11) and you will think it to be mine,
+ and be bit; for I have no hand in these papers at all. I dined with Lord
+ Treasurer, and shall again to-morrow, which is his day when all the
+ Ministers dine with him. He calls it whipping-day. It is always on
+ Saturday, and we do indeed usually rally him about his faults on that day.
+ I was of the original Club, when only poor Lord Rivers, Lord Keeper, and
+ Lord Bolingbroke came; but now Ormond, Anglesea, Lord Steward,(12)
+ Dartmouth, and other rabble intrude, and I scold at it; but now they
+ pretend as good a title as I; and, indeed, many Saturdays I am not there.
+ The company being too many, I don't love it. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. At seven this evening, as we sat after dinner at Lord Treasurer's, a
+ servant said Lord Peterborow was at the door. Lord Treasurer and Lord
+ Bolingbroke went out to meet him, and brought him in. He was just returned
+ from abroad, where he has been above a year. Soon as he saw me, he left
+ the Duke of Ormond and other lords, and ran and kissed me before he spoke
+ to them; but chid me terribly for not writing to him, which I never did
+ this last time he was abroad, not knowing where he was; and he changed
+ places so often, it was impossible a letter should overtake him. He left
+ England with a bruise, by his coach overturning, that made him spit blood,
+ and was so ill, we expected every post to hear of his death; but he
+ outrode it or outdrank it, or something, and is come home lustier than
+ ever. He is at least sixty, and has more spirits than any young fellow I
+ know in England. He has got the old Oxford regiment of horse, and I
+ believe will have a Garter. I love the hang-dog dearly. Nite dee MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. The Court was crammed to-day to see(13) the French Ambassador; but he
+ did not come. Did I never tell you that I go to Court on Sundays as to a
+ coffee-house, to see acquaintance, whom I should otherwise not see twice a
+ year? The Provost(14) and I dined with Ned Southwell, by appointment, in
+ order to settle your kingdom, if my scheme can be followed; but I doubt
+ our Ministry will be too tedious. You must certainly have a new
+ Parliament; but they would have that a secret yet. Our Parliament here
+ will be prorogued for three weeks. Those puppies the Dutch will not yet
+ come in, though they pretend to submit to the Queen in everything; but
+ they would fain try first how our session begins, in hopes to embroil us
+ in the House of Lords: and if my advice had been taken, the session should
+ have begun, and we would have trusted the Parliament to approve the steps
+ already made toward the peace, and had an Address perhaps from them to
+ conclude without the Dutch, if they would not agree.&mdash;Others are of
+ my mind, but it is not reckoned so safe, it seems; yet I doubt whether the
+ peace will be ready so soon as three weeks, but that is a secret. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. Pratt and I walked into the City to one Bateman's,(15) a famous
+ bookseller, for old books. There I laid out four pounds like a fool, and
+ we dined at a hedge ale-house, for two shillings and twopence, like
+ emperors. Let me see, I bought Plutarch, two volumes, for thirty
+ shillings, etc. Well, I'll tell you no more; oo don't understand
+ Greek.(16) We have no news, and I have nothing more to say to-day, and I
+ can't finish my work. These Ministers will not find time to do what I
+ would have them. So nite, nown dee dallars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. I was to have dined to-day with Lord Keeper, but would not, because
+ that brute Sir John Walter(17) was to be one of the company. You may
+ remember he railed at me last summer was twelvemonth at Windsor, and has
+ never begged my pardon, though he promised to do it; and Lord Mansel, who
+ was one of the company, would certainly have set us together by the ears,
+ out of pure roguish mischief. So I dined with Lord Treasurer, where there
+ was none but Lord Bolingbroke. I stayed till eight, and then went to Lady
+ Orkney's, who has been sick, and sat with her till twelve, from whence you
+ may consider it is late, sollahs. The Parliament was prorogued to-day, as
+ I told you, for three weeks. Our weather is very bad and slobbery, and I
+ shall spoil my new hat (I have bought a new hat), or empty my pockets.
+ Does Hawkshaw pay the interest he owes? Lord Abercorn plagues me to death.
+ I have now not above six people to provide for, and about as many to do
+ good offices to; and thrice as many that I will do nothing for; nor can I
+ if I would. Nite dee MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. To-day I took the circle of morning visits. I went to the Duchess of
+ Ormond, and there was she, and Lady Betty, and Lord Ashburnham together:
+ this was the first time the mother and daughter saw each other since Lady
+ Ashburnham's death. They were both in tears, and I chid them for being
+ together, and made Lady Betty go to her own chamber; then sat a while with
+ the Duchess, and went after Lady Betty, and all was well. There is
+ something of farce in all these mournings, let them be ever so serious.
+ People will pretend to grieve more than they really do, and that takes off
+ from their true grief. I then went to the Duchess of Hamilton, who never
+ grieved, but raged, and stormed, and railed.(18) She is pretty quiet now,
+ but has a diabolical temper. Lord Keeper and his son, and their two
+ ladies, and I, dined to-day with Mr. Caesar,(19) Treasurer of the Navy, at
+ his house in the City, where he keeps his office. We happened to talk of
+ Brutus, and I said something in his praise, when it struck me immediately
+ that I had made a blunder in doing so; and, therefore, I recollected
+ myself, and said, "Mr. Caesar, I beg your pardon." So we laughed, etc.
+ Nite, my own deelest richar logues, MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. I forgot to tell you that last night I had a present sent me (I found
+ it, when I came home, in my chamber) of the finest wild fowl I ever saw,
+ with the vilest letter, and from the vilest poet in the world, who sent it
+ me as a bribe to get him an employment. I knew not where the scoundrel
+ lived, so I could not send them back, and therefore I gave them away as
+ freely as I got them, and have ordered my man never to let up the poet
+ when he comes. The rogue should have kept the wings at least for his muse.
+ One of his fowls was a large capon pheasant, as fat as a pullet. I ate
+ share of it to-day with a friend. We have now a Drawing-room every
+ Wednesday, Thursday, and Saturday at one o'clock. The Queen does not come
+ out; but all her Ministers, foreigners, and persons of quality are at it.
+ I was there to-day; and as Lord Treasurer came towards me, I avoided him,
+ and he hunted me thrice about the room. I affect never to take notice of
+ him at church or Court. He knows it, for I have told him so; and to-night,
+ at Lord Masham's, he gave an account of it to the company; but my reasons
+ are, that people seeing me speak to him causes a great deal of teasing. I
+ tell you what comes into my head, that I never knew whether MD were Whigs
+ or Tories, and I value our conversation the more that it never turned on
+ that subject. I have a fancy that Ppt is a Tory, and a violent one. I
+ don't know why; but methinks she looks like one, and DD a sort of a
+ Trimmer. Am I right? I gave the Examiner a hint about this prorogation,
+ and to praise the Queen for her tenderness to the Dutch in giving them
+ still more time to submit.(20) It fitted the occasions at present. Nite
+ MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. I was busy to-day at the Secretary's office, and stayed till past
+ three. The Duke of Ormond and I were to dine at Lord Orkney's. The Duke
+ was at the Committee, so I thought all was safe. When I went there, they
+ had almost dined; for the Duke had sent to excuse himself, which I never
+ knew. I came home at seven, and began a little whim, which just came into
+ my head; and will make a threepenny pamphlet.(21) It shall be finished and
+ out in a week; and if it succeeds, you shall know what it is; otherwise,
+ not. I cannot send this to-morrow, and will put it off till next Saturday,
+ because I have much business. So my journals shall be short, and Ppt must
+ have patience. So nite, dee sollahs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. This rogue Parnell has not yet corrected his poem, and I would fain
+ have it out. I dined to-day with Lord Treasurer, and his Saturday company,
+ nine of us in all. They went away at seven, and Lord Treasurer and I sat
+ talking an hour after. After dinner he was talking to the lords about the
+ speech the Queen must make when the Parliament meets. He asked me how I
+ would make it. I was going to be serious, because it was seriously put;
+ but I turned it to a jest. And because they had been speaking of the
+ Duchess of Marlborough going to Flanders after the Duke, I said the speech
+ should begin thus: "My Lords and Gentlemen, In order to my own quiet, and
+ that of my subjects, I have thought fit to send the Duchess of Marlborough
+ abroad after the Duke." This took well, and turned off the discourse. I
+ must tell you I do not at all like the present situation of affairs, and
+ remember I tell you so. Things must be on another foot, or we are all
+ undone. I hate this driving always to an inch. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. We had a mighty full Court to-day. Dilly was with me at the French
+ church, and edified mightily. The Duke of Ormond and I dined at Lord
+ Orkney's; but I left them at seven, and came home to my whim. I have made
+ a great progress. My large Treatise(22) stands stock still. Some think it
+ too dangerous to publish, and would have me print only what relates to the
+ peace. I cannot tell what I shall do.&mdash;The Bishop of Dromore is
+ dying. They thought yesterday he could not live two hours; yet he is still
+ alive, but is utterly past all hopes. Go to cards, sollahs, and nite.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. I was this morning to see the Duke and Duchess of Ormond. The Duke
+ d'Aumont came in while I was with the Duke of Ormond, and we complimented
+ each other like dragons. A poor fellow called at the door where I lodge,
+ with a parcel of oranges for a present for me. I bid my man know what his
+ name was, and whence he came. He sent word his name was Bun, and that I
+ knew him very well. I bid my man tell him I was busy, and he could not
+ speak to me; and not to let him leave his oranges. I know no more of it,
+ but I am sure I never heard the name, and I shall take no such presents
+ from strangers. Perhaps he might be only some beggar, who wanted a little
+ money. Perhaps it might be something worse. Let them keep their poison for
+ their rats. I don't love it.(23) That blot is a blunder. Nite dee MD....
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. A Committee of our Society dined to-day with the Chancellor of the
+ Exchequer. Our Society does not meet now as usual, for which I am blamed:
+ but till Lord Treasurer will agree to give us money and employments to
+ bestow, I am averse to it; and he gives us nothing but promises. The
+ Bishop of Dromore is still alive, and that is all. We expect every day he
+ will die, and then Tom Leigh must go back, which is one good thing to the
+ town. I believe Pratt will drive at one of these bishoprics. Our English
+ bishopric(24) is not yet disposed of. I believe the peace will not be
+ ready by the session. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21. I was to-day with my printer, to give him a little pamphlet I have
+ written, but not politics. It will be out by Monday. If it succeeds, I
+ will tell you of it; otherwise, not. We had a prodigious thaw to-day, as
+ bad as rain; yet I walked like a good boy all the way. The Bishop of
+ Dromore still draws breath, but cannot live two days longer. My large book
+ lies flat. Some people think a great part of it ought not to be now
+ printed. I believe I told you so before. This letter shall not go till
+ Saturday, which makes up the three weeks exactly; and I allow MD six
+ weeks, which are now almost out; so oo must know I expect a rettle vely
+ soon, and that MD is vely werr;(25) and so nite, dee MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22. This is one of our Court days, and I was there. I told you there is a
+ Drawing-room, Wednesday, Thursday, and Saturday. The Hamiltons and
+ Abercorns have done teasing me. The latter, I hear, is actually going to
+ France. Lord Treasurer quarrelled with me at Court for being four days
+ without dining with him; so I dined there to-day, and he has at last
+ fallen in with my project (as he calls it) of coining halfpence and
+ farthings, with devices, like medals, in honour of the Queen, every year
+ changing the device. I wish it may be done. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23. The Duke of Ormond and I appointed to dine with Ned Southwell to-day,
+ to talk of settling your affairs of Parliament in Ireland, but there was a
+ mixture of company, and the Duke of Ormond was in haste, and nothing was
+ done. If your Parliament meets this summer, it must be a new one; but I
+ find some are of opinion there should be none at all these two years. I
+ will trouble myself no more about it. My design was to serve the Duke of
+ Ormond. Dr. Pratt and I sat this evening with the Bishop of Clogher, and
+ played at ombre for threepences. That, I suppose, is but low with you. I
+ found, at coming home, a letter from MD, N.37. I shall not answer it zis
+ bout, but will the next. I am sorry for poo poo Ppt. Pray walk hen oo can.
+ I have got a terrible new cold before my old one was quite gone, and don't
+ know how. Pay. ... (26) I shall have DD's money soon from the Exchequer.
+ The Bishop of Dromore is dead now at last. Nite, dee MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24. I was at Court to-day, and it was comical to see Lord Abercorn bowing
+ to me, but not speaking, and Lord Selkirk the same.(27) I dined with Lord
+ Treasurer and his Saturday Club, and sat with him two hours after the rest
+ were gone, and spoke freer to him of affairs than I am afraid others do,
+ who might do more good. All his friends repine, and shrug their shoulders;
+ but will not deal with him so freely as they ought. It is an odd business;
+ the Parliament just going to sit, and no employments given. They say they
+ will give them in a few days. There is a new bishop made of Hereford;(28)
+ so Ossory(29) is disappointed. I hinted so to his friends two months ago,
+ to make him leave off deluding himself, and being indiscreet, as he was. I
+ have just time to send this, without giving to the bellman. Nite deelest
+ richar MD.... dee MD MD MD FW FW FW ME ME ME Lele Lele Lele.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My second cold is better now. Lele lele lele lele.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0062" id="link2H_4_0062">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 59.(1)
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, Jan. 25, 1712-1713.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ We had such a terrible storm to-day, that, going to Lord Bolingbroke's, I
+ saw a hundred tiles fallen down; and one swinger fell about forty yards
+ before me, that would have killed a horse: so, after church and Court, I
+ walked through the Park, and took a chair to Lord Treasurer's. Next door
+ to his house, a tin chimneytop had fallen down, with a hundred bricks. It
+ is grown calm this evening. I wonder had you such a wind to-day? I hate it
+ as much as any hog does. Lord Treasurer has engaged me to dine again with
+ him to-morrow. He has those tricks sometimes of inviting me from day to
+ day, which I am forced to break through. My little pamphlet(2) is out:
+ 'tis not politics. If it takes, I say again you shall hear of it. Nite dee
+ logues.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26. This morning I felt a little touch of giddiness, which has disordered
+ and weakened me with its ugly remains all this day. Pity Pdfr. After
+ dinner at Lord Treasurer's, the French Ambassador, Duke d'Aumont, sent
+ Lord Treasurer word that his house was burnt down to the ground. It took
+ fire in the upper rooms, while he was at dinner with Monteleon, the
+ Spanish Ambassador, and other persons; and soon after Lord Bolingbroke
+ came to us with the same story. We are full of speculations upon it, but I
+ believe it was the carelessness of his French rascally servants. 'Tis odd
+ that this very day Lord Somers, Wharton, Sunderland, Halifax, and the
+ whole club of Whig lords, dined at Pontack's(3) in the City, as I received
+ private notice. They have some damned design. I tell you another odd
+ thing; I was observing it to Lord Treasurer, that he was stabbed on the
+ day King William died; and the day I saved his life, by opening the
+ bandbox,(4) was King William's birthday. My friend Mr. Lewis has had a lie
+ spread on him by the mistake of a man, who went to another of his name, to
+ give him thanks for passing his Privy Seal to come from France.(5) That
+ other Lewis spread about that the man brought him thanks from Lord Perth
+ and Lord Melfort (two lords with the Pretender), for his great services,
+ etc. The Lords will examine that t'other Lewis to-morrow in council; and I
+ believe you will hear of it in the prints, for I will make Abel Roper give
+ a relation of it. Pray tell me if it be necessary to write a little
+ plainer; for I looked over a bit of my last letter, and could hardly read
+ it. I'll mend my hand, if oo please: but you are more used to it nor I, as
+ Mr. Raymond says. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27. I dined to-day with Lord Treasurer: this makes four days together; and
+ he has invited me again to-morrow, but I absolutely refused him. I was
+ this evening at a christening with him of Lord Dupplin's(6) daughter. He
+ went away at ten; but they kept me and some others till past twelve; so
+ you may be sure 'tis late, as they say. We have now stronger suspicions
+ that the Duke d'Aumont's house was set on fire by malice. I was to-day to
+ see Lord Keeper, who has quite lost his voice with a cold. There Dr.
+ Radcliffe told me that it was the Ambassador's confectioner set the house
+ on fire by boiling sugar, and going down and letting it boil over. Yet
+ others still think differently; so I know not what to judge. Nite my own
+ deelest MD, rove Pdfr.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28. I was to-day at Court, where the Spanish Ambassador talked to me as if
+ he did not suspect any design in burning d'Aumont's house: but Abbe
+ Gaultier, Secretary for France here, said quite otherwise; and that
+ d'Aumont had a letter the very same day to let him know his house should
+ be burnt, and they tell several other circumstances too tedious to write.
+ One is, that a fellow mending the tiles just when the fire broke out, saw
+ a pot with wildfire(7) in the room. I dined with Lord Orkney. Neither Lord
+ Abercorn nor Selkirk will now speak with me. I have disobliged both sides.
+ Nite dear MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29. Our Society met to-day, fourteen of us, and at a tavern. We now
+ resolve to meet but once a fortnight, and have a Committee every other
+ week of six or seven, to consult about doing some good. I proposed another
+ message to Lord Treasurer by three principal members, to give a hundred
+ guineas to a certain person, and they are to urge it as well as they can.
+ We also raised sixty guineas upon our own Society; but I made them do it
+ by sessors,(8) and I was one of them, and we fitted our tax to the several
+ estates. The Duke of Ormond pays ten guineas, and I the third part of a
+ guinea; at that rate, they may tax as often as they please. Well, but I
+ must answer oor rettle, ung oomens: not yet; 'tis rate now, and I can't
+ tind it. Nite deelest MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30. I have drank Spa waters this two or three days; but they do not pass,
+ and make me very giddy. I an't well; faith, I'll take them no more. I
+ sauntered after church with the Provost to-day to see a library to be
+ sold, and dined at five with Lord Orkney. We still think there was malice
+ in burning d'Aumont's house. I hear little Harrison(9) is come over; it
+ was he I sent to Utrecht. He is now Queen's Secretary to the Embassy, and
+ has brought with him the Barrier Treaty, as it is now corrected by us, and
+ yielded to by the Dutch, which was the greatest difficulty to retard the
+ peace. I hope he will bring over the peace a month hence, for we will send
+ him back as soon as possible. I long to see the little brat, my own
+ creature. His pay is in all a thousand pounds a year, and they have never
+ paid him a groat, though I have teased their hearts out. He must be three
+ or four hundred pounds in debt at least, the brat! Let me go to bed,
+ sollahs.&mdash;Nite dee richar MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 31. Harrison was with me this morning: we talked three hours, and then I
+ carried him to Court. When we went down to the door of my lodging, I found
+ a coach waited for him. I chid him for it; but he whispered me it was
+ impossible to do otherwise; and in the coach he told me he had not one
+ farthing in his pocket to pay it; and therefore took the coach for the
+ whole day, and intended to borrow money somewhere or other. So there was
+ the Queen's Minister entrusted in affairs of the greatest importance,
+ without a shilling in his pocket to pay a coach! I paid him while he was
+ with me seven guineas, in part of a dozen of shirts he bought me in
+ Holland. I presented him to the Duke of Ormond, and several lords at
+ Court; and I contrived it so that Lord Treasurer came to me and asked (I
+ had Parnell by me) whether that was Dr. Parnell, and came up and spoke to
+ him with great kindness, and invited him to his house. I value myself upon
+ making the Ministry desire to be acquainted with Parnell, and not Parnell
+ with the Ministry. His poem is almost fully corrected, and shall soon be
+ out. Here's enough for to-day: only to tell you that I was in the City
+ with my printer to alter an Examiner about my friend Lewis's story,(10)
+ which will be told with remarks. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Feb. 1. I could do nothing till to-day about the Examiner, but the printer
+ came this morning, and I dictated to him what was fit to be said, and then
+ Mr. Lewis came, and corrected it as he would have it; so I was neither at
+ church nor Court. The Duke of Ormond and I dined at Lord Orkney's. I left
+ them at seven, and sat with Sir Andrew Fountaine, who has a very bad sore
+ leg, for which he designs to go to France. Fais, here's a week gone, and
+ one side of this letter not finished. Oh, but I write now but once in
+ three weeks; iss, fais, this shall go sooner. The Parliament is to sit on
+ the third, but will adjourn for three or four days; for the Queen is laid
+ up with the gout, and both Speakers out of order, though one of them, the
+ Lord Keeper, is almost well. I spoke to the Duke of Ormond a good deal
+ about Ireland. We do not altogether agree, nor am I judge enough of Irish
+ affairs; but I will speak to Lord Treasurer to-morrow, that we three may
+ settle them some way or other. Nite sollahs both, rove Pdfr.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. I had a letter some days ago from Moll Gery;(11) her name is now
+ Wigmore, and her husband has turned parson. She desires nothing but that I
+ would get Lord Keeper to give him a living; but I will send her no answer,
+ though she desires it much. She still makes mantuas at Farnham. It rained
+ all this day, and Dilly came to me, and was coaching it into the City; so
+ I went with him for a shaking, because it would not cost me a farthing.
+ There I met my friend Stratford,(12) the merchant, who is going abroad to
+ gather up his debts, and be clear in the world. He begged that I would
+ dine with some merchant friends of ours there, because it was the last
+ time I should see him: so I did, and thought to have seen Lord Treasurer
+ in the evening, but he happened to go out at five; so I visited some
+ friends, and came home. And now I have the greatest part of your letter to
+ answer; and yet I will not do it to-night, say what oo please. The
+ Parliament meets to-morrow, but will be prorogued for a fortnight; which
+ disappointment will, I believe, vex abundance of them, though they are not
+ Whigs; for they are forced to be in town at expense for nothing: but we
+ want an answer from Spain, before we are sure of everything being right
+ for the peace; and God knows whether we can have that answer this month.
+ It is a most ticklish juncture of affairs; we are always driving to an
+ inch: I am weary of it. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. The Parliament met, and was prorogued, as I said, and I found some
+ cloudy faces, and heard some grumbling. We have got over all our
+ difficulties with France, I think. They have now settled all the articles
+ of commerce between us and them, wherein they were very much disposed to
+ play the rogue if we had not held them to (it); and this business we wait
+ from Spain is to prevent some other rogueries of the French, who are
+ finding an evasion to trade to the Spanish West Indies; but I hope we
+ shall prevent it. I dined with Lord Treasurer, and he was in good humour
+ enough. I gave him that part of my book in manuscript to read where his
+ character was, and drawn pretty freely. He was reading and correcting it
+ with his pencil, when the Bishop of St. David's(13) (now removing to
+ Hereford) came in and interrupted us. I left him at eight, and sat till
+ twelve with the Provost and Bishop of Clogher at the Provost's. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. I was to-day at Court, but kept out of Lord Treasurer's way, because I
+ was engaged to the Duke of Ormond, where I dined, and, I think, ate and
+ drank too much. I sat this evening with Lady Masham, and then with Lord
+ Masham and Lord Treasurer at Lord Masham's. It was last year, you may
+ remember, my constant evening place. I saw Lady Jersey(14) with Lady
+ Masham, who has been laying out for my acquaintance, and has forced a
+ promise for me to drink chocolate with her in a day or two, which I know
+ not whether I shall perform (I have just mended my pen, you see), for I do
+ not much like her character; but she is very malicious, and therefore I
+ think I must keep fair with her. I cannot send this letter till Saturday
+ next, I find; so I will answer oors now. I see no different days of the
+ month; yet it is dated January 3: so it was long a coming. I did not write
+ to Dr. Coghill that I would have nothing in Ireland, but that I was
+ soliciting nothing anywhere, and that is true. I have named Dr. Sterne to
+ Lord Treasurer, Lord Bolingbroke, and the Duke of Ormond, for a bishopric,
+ and I did it heartily. I know not what will come of it; but I tell you as
+ a great secret that I have made the Duke of Ormond promise me to recommend
+ nobody till he tells me, and this for some reasons too long to mention. My
+ head is still in no good order. I am heartily sorry for poo Ppt, I'm sure.
+ Her head is good for...(15) I'll answer more to-mollow. Nite, dearest MD;
+ nite dee sollahs, MD.(16)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. I must go on with oo letter. I dined to-day with Sir Andrew Fountaine
+ and the Provost, and I played at ombre with him all the afternoon. I won,
+ yet Sir Andrew is an admirable player. Lord Pembroke(17) came in, and I
+ gave him three or four scurvy Dilly puns, that begin with an IF. Well, but
+ oor letter, well, ret me see.&mdash;No; I believe I shall write no more
+ this good while, nor publish what I have done. Nauty (?) Ppt, oo are vely
+ tempegant. I did not suspect oo would tell Filby.(18) Oo are so... (19)
+ Turns and visitations&mdash;what are these? I'll preach and visit as much
+ for Mr. Walls. Pray God mend poopt's(20) health; mine is but very
+ indifferent. I have left off Spa water; it makes my leg swell. Nite
+ deelest MD.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+6. This is the Queen's Birthday, and I never saw it celebrated with so
+much luxury and fine clothes. I went to Court to see them, and I dined
+with Lord Keeper, where the ladies were fine to admiration. I passed the
+evening at Mrs. Vanhomrigh's, and came home pretty early, to answer oo
+rettle again. Pray God keep the Queen. She was very ill about ten days
+ago, and had the gout in her stomach. When I came from Lord Keeper's, I
+called at Lord Treasurer's, because I heard he was very fine, and
+that was a new thing; and it was true, for his coat and waistcoat were
+embroidered. I have seen the Provost often since, and never spoke to him
+to speak to the Temples about Daniel Carr, nor will; I don't care to do
+it. I have writ lately to Parvisol. Oo did well to let him make up his
+accounts. All things grow dear in Ireland, but corn to the parsons; for
+my livings are fallen much this year by Parvisol's account. Nite dee
+logues, MD.
+
+ 7.(8) I was at Court to-day, but saw no Birthday clothes; the great folks
+never wear them above once or twice. I dined with Lord Orkney, and sat
+the evening with Sir Andrew Fountaine, whose leg is in a very dubious
+condition. Pray let me know when DD's money is near due: always let me
+know it beforehand. This, I believe, will hardly go till Saturday; for
+I tell you what, being not very well, I dare not study much: so I let
+company come in a morning, and the afternoon pass in dining and sitting
+somewhere. Lord Treasurer is angry if I don't dine with him every second
+day, and I cannot part with him till late: he kept me last night till
+near twelve. Our weather is constant rain above these two months, which
+hinders walking, so that our spring is not like yours. I have not seen
+Fanny Manley(21) yet; I cannot find time. I am in rebellion with all my
+acquaintance, but I will mend with my health and the weather. Clogher
+make a figure! Clogher make a &mdash;&mdash;. Colds! why, we have been all dying
+with colds; but now they are a little over, and my second is almost
+off. I can do nothing for Swanton indeed. It is a thing impossible, and
+wholly out of my way. If he buys, he must buy. So now I have answered oo
+rettle; and there's an end of that now; and I'll say no more, but bid oo
+nite, dee MD.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ 8.(9) It was terrible rainy to-day from morning till night. I intended to
+ have dined with Lord Treasurer, but went to see Sir Andrew Fountaine, and
+ he kept me to dinner, which saved coach-hire; and I stayed with him all
+ the afternoon, and lost thirteen shillings and sixpence at ombre. There
+ was management! and Lord Treasurer will chide; but I'll dine with him
+ to-morrow. The Bishop of Clogher's daughter has been ill some days,(22)
+ and it proves the smallpox. She is very full; but it comes out well, and
+ they apprehend no danger. Lady Orkney has given me her picture; a very
+ fine original of Sir Godfrey Kneller's; it is now a mending. He has
+ favoured her squint admirably; and you know I love a cast in the eye. I
+ was to see Lady Worsley(23) to-day, who is just come to town; she is full
+ of rheumatic pains. All my acquaintance grow old and sickly. She lodges in
+ the very house in King Street, between St. James's Street and St. James's
+ Square, where DD's brother bought the sweetbread, when I lodged there, and
+ MD came to see me. Short sighs.(24) Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9.(10) I thought to have dined with Lord Treasurer to-day, but he dined
+ abroad at Tom Harley's; so I dined at Lord Masham's, and was winning all I
+ had lost playing with Lady Masham at crown picquet, when we went to pools,
+ and I lost it again. Lord Treasurer came in to us, and chid me for not
+ following him to Tom Harley's. Miss Ashe is still the same, and they think
+ her not in danger; my man calls there daily after I am gone out, and tells
+ me at night. I was this morning to see Lady Jersey, and we have made
+ twenty parties about dining together, and I shall hardly keep one of them.
+ She is reduced after all her greatness to seven servants, and a small
+ house, and no coach.(25) I like her tolerably as yet. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10.(11) I made visits this morning to the Duke and Duchess of Ormond, and
+ Lady Betty, and the Duchess of Hamilton. (When I was writing this near
+ twelve o'clock, the Duchess of Hamilton sent to have me dine with her
+ to-morrow. I am forced to give my answer through the door, for my man has
+ got the key, and is gone to bed; but I cannot obey her, for our Society
+ meets to-morrow.) I stole away from Lord Treasurer by eight, and intended
+ to have passed the evening with Sir Thomas Clarges(26) and his lady; but
+ met them in another place, and have there sat till now. My head has not
+ been ill to-day. I was at Court, and made Lord Mansel walk with me in the
+ Park before we went to dinner.&mdash;Yesterday and to-day have been fair,
+ but yet it rained all last night. I saw Sterne staring at Court to-day. He
+ has been often to see me, he says: but my man has not yet let him up. He
+ is in deep mourning; I hope it is not for his wife.(27) I did not ask him.
+ Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12.(28) I have reckoned days wrong all this while; for this is the
+ twelfth. I do not know when I lost it. I dined to-day with our Society,
+ the greatest dinner I have ever seen. It was at Jack Hill's, the Governor
+ of Dunkirk. I gave an account of sixty guineas I had collected, and am to
+ give them away to two authors to-morrow; and Lord Treasurer has promised
+ us a hundred pounds to reward some others. I found a letter on my table
+ last night to tell me that poor little Harrison, the Queen's Secretary,
+ that came lately from Utrecht with the Barrier Treaty, was ill, and
+ desired to see me at night; but it was late, and I could not go till
+ to-day. I have often mentioned him in my letters, you may remember.... I
+ went in the morning, and found him mighty ill, and got thirty guineas for
+ him from Lord Bolingbroke, and an order for a hundred pounds from the
+ Treasury to be paid him to-morrow; and I have got him removed to
+ Knightsbridge for air. He has a fever and inflammation on his lungs; but I
+ hope will do well. Nite.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. I was to see a poor poet, one Mr. Diaper,(29) in a nasty garret, very
+ sick. I gave him twenty guineas from Lord Bolingbroke, and disposed the
+ other sixty to two other authors, and desired a friend to receive the
+ hundred pounds for poor Harrison, and will carry it to him to-morrow
+ morning. I sent to see how he did, and he is extremely ill; and I very
+ much afflicted for him, for he is my own creature, and in a very
+ honourable post, and very worthy of it. I dined in the City. I am in much
+ concern for this poor lad. His mother and sister attend him, and he wants
+ nothing. Nite poo dee MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. I took Parnell this morning, and we walked to see poor Harrison. I had
+ the hundred pounds in my pocket. I told Parnell I was afraid to knock at
+ the door; my mind misgave me. I knocked, and his man in tears told me his
+ master was dead an hour before. Think what grief this is to me! I went to
+ his mother, and have been ordering things for his funeral with as little
+ cost as possible, to-morrow at ten at night. Lord Treasurer was much
+ concerned when I told him. I could not dine with Lord Treasurer, nor
+ anywhere else; but got a bit of meat toward evening. No loss ever grieved
+ me so much: poor creature! Pray God Almighty bless poor MD. Adieu.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I send this away to-night, and am sorry it must go while I am in so much
+ grief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0063" id="link2H_4_0063">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 60.(1)
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, Feb. 15 (1712-13).
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I dined to-day with Mr. Rowe(2) and a projector, who has been teasing me
+ with twenty schemes to get grants; and I don't like one of them; and,
+ besides, I was out of humour for the loss of poor Harrison. At ten this
+ night I was at his funeral, which I ordered to be as private as possible.
+ We had but one coach with four of us; and when it was carrying us home
+ after the funeral, the braces broke; and we were forced to sit in it, and
+ have it held up, till my man went for chairs,(3) at eleven at night in
+ terrible rain. I am come home very melancholy, and will go to bed. Nite...
+ MD.(4)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. I dined to-day with Lord Dupplin and some company to divert me; but
+ left them early, and have been reading a foolish book for amusement. I
+ shall never have courage again to care for making anybody's fortune. The
+ Parliament meets to-morrow, and will be prorogued another fortnight, at
+ which several of both parties were angry; but it cannot be helped, though
+ everything about the peace is past all danger. I never saw such a
+ continuance of rainy weather. We have not had two fair days together these
+ ten weeks. I have not dined with Lord Treasurer these four days, nor can I
+ till Saturday; for I have several engagements till then, and he will chide
+ me to some purpose. I am perplexed with this hundred pounds of poor
+ Harrison's, what to do with it. I cannot pay his relations till they
+ administer, for he is much in debt;(5) but I will have the staff in my own
+ hands, and venture nothing. Nite poo dee MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. Lady Jersey and I dined by appointment to-day with Lord Bolingbroke.
+ He is sending his brother(6) to succeed Mr.(7) Harrison. It is the
+ prettiest post in Europe for a young gentleman. I lose my money at ombre
+ sadly; I make a thousand blunders. I play but(8) threepenny ombre; but it
+ is what you call running ombre. Lady Clarges,(9) and a drab I hate, won a
+ dozen shillings of me last night. The Parliament was prorogued to-day; and
+ people grumble; and the good of it is the peace cannot be finished by the
+ time they meet, there are so many fiddling things to do. Is Ppt an ombre
+ lady yet? You know all the tricks of it now, I suppose. I reckon you have
+ all your cards from France, for ours pay sixpence a pack taxes, which goes
+ deep to the box. I have given away all my Spa water, and take some nasty
+ steel drops, and my head has been better this week past. I send every day
+ to see how Miss Ashe does: she is very full, they say, but in no danger. I
+ fear she will lose some of her beauty. The son lies out of the house. I
+ wish he had them too, while he is so young.&mdash;Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. The Earl of Abingdon(10) has been teasing me these three months to
+ dine with him; and this day was appointed about a week ago, and I named my
+ company; Lord Stawel,(11) Colonel Disney,(12) and Dr. Arbuthnot; but the
+ two last slipped out their necks, and left Stawell and me to dine there.
+ We did not dine till seven, because it is Ash Wednesday. We had nothing
+ but fish, which Lord Stawell could not eat, and got a broiled leg of a
+ turkey. Our wine was poison; yet the puppy has twelve thousand pound a
+ year. His carps were raw, and his candles tallow. He(13) shall not catch
+ me in haste again, and everybody has laughed at me for dining with him. I
+ was to-day to let Harrison's mother know I could not pay till she
+ administers; which she will do. I believe she is an old bawd,(14) and her
+ daughter a &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;. There were more Whigs to-day at Court
+ than Tories. I believe they think the peace must be made, and so come to
+ please the Queen. She is still lame with the gout. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. I was at Court to-day, to speak to Lord Bolingbroke to look over
+ Parnell's poem since it is corrected; and Parnell and I dined with him,
+ and he has shown him three or four more places to alter a little. Lady
+ Bolingbroke came down to us while we were at dinner, and Parnell stared at
+ her as if she were a goddess. I thought she was like Parnell's wife, and
+ he thought so too. Parnell is much pleased with Lord Bolingbroke's favour
+ to him, and I hope it may one day turn to his advantage. His poem will be
+ printed in a few days. Our weather continues as fresh raining as if it had
+ not rained at all. I sat to-night at Lady Masham's, where Lord Treasurer
+ came and scolded me for not dining with him. I told him I could not till
+ Saturday. I have stayed there till past twelve. So nite dee sollahs, nite.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. Lady Jersey, Lady Catherine Hyde,(15) the Spanish Ambassador, the Duke
+ d'Atree,(16) another Spaniard, and I, dined to-day by appointment with
+ Lord Bolingbroke; but they fell a drinking so many Spanish healths in
+ champagne that I stole away to the ladies, and drank tea till eight; and
+ then went and lost my money at ombre with Sir Andrew Fountaine, who has a
+ very bad leg. Miss Ashe is past all danger; and her eye, which was lately
+ bad (I suppose one effect of her distemper), is now better. I do not let
+ the Bishop see me, nor shall this good while. Good luck! when I came home,
+ I warrant, I found a letter from MD, No.38; and oo write so small
+ nowadays, I hope oo poor eyes are better. Well, this shall go to-morrow
+ se'nnight, with a bill for MD. I will speak to Mr. Griffin(17) to-morrow
+ about Ppt's brother Filby, and desire, whether he deserves or no, that his
+ employment may be mended; that is to say, if I can see Griffin; otherwise
+ not; and I'll answer oo rettle hen I Pdfr think fit. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21. Methinks I writ a little saucy last night. I mean the last... (18) I
+ saw Griffin at Court. He says he knows nothing of a salt-work at Recton;
+ but that he will give Filby a better employment, and desires Filby will
+ write to him. If I knew how to write to Filby, I would; but pray do you.
+ Bid him make no mention of you; but only let Mr. Griffin know that he has
+ the honour to be recommended by Dr. S&mdash;&mdash;, etc.; that he will
+ endeavour to deserve, etc.; and if you dictated a whole letter for him, it
+ would be better; I hope he can write and spell well. I'll inquire for a
+ direction to Griffin before I finish this. I dined with Lord Treasurer and
+ seven lords to-day. You know Saturday is his great day, but I sat with
+ them alone till eight, and then came home, and have been writing a letter
+ to Mrs. Davis, at York. She took care to have a letter delivered for me at
+ Lord Treasurer's; for I would not own one she sent by post. She reproaches
+ me for not writing to her these four years; and I have honestly told her
+ it was my way never to write to those whom I am never likely to see,
+ unless I can serve them, which I cannot her, etc. Davis the schoolmaster's
+ widow. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22. I dined to-day at Lord Orkney's, with the Duke of Ormond and Sir
+ Thomas Hanmer.(19) Have you ever heard of the latter? He married the
+ Duchess of Grafton in his youth (she dined with us too). He is the most
+ considerable man in the House of Commons. He went last spring to Flanders,
+ with the Duke of Ormond; from thence to France, and was going to Italy;
+ but the Ministry sent for him, and he has been come over about ten days.
+ He is much out of humour with things: he thinks the peace is kept off too
+ long, and is full of fears and doubts. It is thought he is designed for
+ Secretary of State, instead of Lord Dartmouth. We have been acquainted
+ these two years; and I intend, in a day or two, to have an hour's talk
+ with him on affairs. I saw the Bishop of Clogher at Court; Miss is
+ recovering. I know not how much she will be marked. The Queen is slowly
+ mending of her gout, and intends to be brought in a chair to Parliament
+ when it meets, which will be March 3; for I suppose they will prorogue no
+ more; yet the peace will not be signed then, and we apprehend the Tories
+ themselves will many of them be discontented. Nite dee MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23. It was ill weather to-day, and I dined with Sir Andrew Fountaine, and
+ in the evening played at ombre with him and the Provost, and won
+ twenty-five shillings; so I have recovered myself pretty well. Dilly has
+ been dunning me to see Fanny Manley; but I have not yet been able to do
+ it. Miss Ashe is now quite out of danger; and hope will not be much
+ marked. I cannot tell how to direct to Griffin; and think he lives in Bury
+ Street, near St. James's Street, hard by me; but I suppose your brother
+ may direct to him to the Salt Office, and, as I remember, he knows his
+ Christian name, because he sent it me in the list of the Commissioners.
+ Nite dee MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24. I walked this morning to Chelsea, to see Dr. Atterbury, Dean of Christ
+ Church. I had business with him about entering Mr. Fitzmaurice,(20) my
+ Lord Kerry's son, into his College; and Lady Kerry(21) is a great
+ favourite of mine. Lord Harley, Lord Dupplin, young Bromley(22) the
+ Speaker's son, and I, dined with Dr. Stratford(23) and some other
+ clergymen; but I left them at seven to go to Lady Jersey, to see Monteleon
+ the Spanish Ambassador play at ombre. Lady Jersey was abroad, and I chid
+ the servants, and made a rattle; but since I came home she sent me a
+ message that I was mistaken, and that the meeting is to be to-morrow. I
+ have a worse memory than when I left you, and every day forget
+ appointments; but here my memory was by chance too good. But I'll go
+ to-morrow; for Lady Catherine Hyde and Lady Bolingbroke are to be there by
+ appointment, and I listed(24) up my periwig, and all, to make a figure.
+ Well, who can help it? Not I, vow to...!(25) Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25. Lord Treasurer met me last night at Lord Masham's, and thanked me for
+ my company in a jeer, because I had not dined with him in three days. He
+ chides me if I stay away but two days together. What will this come to?
+ Nothing. My grandmother used to say, "More of your lining, and less of
+ your dining." However, I dined with him, and could hardly leave him at
+ eight, to go to Lady Jersey's, where five or six foreign Ministers were,
+ and as many ladies. Monteleon played like the English, and cried "gacco,"
+ and knocked his knuckles for trump, and played at small games like Ppt.
+ Lady Jersey whispered me to stay and sup with the ladies when the fellows
+ were gone; but they played till eleven, and I would not stay. I think this
+ letter must go on Saturday; that's certain; and it is not half full yet.
+ Lady Catherine Hyde had a mighty mind I should be acquainted with Lady
+ Dalkeith,(26) her sister, the Duke of Monmouth's eldest son's widow, who
+ was of the company to-night; but I did not like her; she paints too much.
+ Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26. This day our Society met at the Duke of Ormond's, but I had business
+ that called me another way; so I sent my excuses, and dined privately with
+ a friend. Besides, Sir Thomas Hanmer whispered me last night at Lady
+ Jersey's that I must attend Lord Treasurer and Duke of Ormond at supper at
+ his house to-night; which I did at eleven, and stayed till one, so oo may
+ be sure 'tis late enough. There was the Duchess of Grafton, and the Duke
+ her son; nine of us in all. The Duke of Ormond chid me for not being at
+ the Society to-day, and said sixteen were there. I said I never knew
+ sixteen people good company in my life; no, fais, nor eight either. We
+ have no news in this town at all. I wonder why I don't write you news. I
+ know less of what passes than anybody, because I go to(27) no
+ coffee-house, nor see any but Ministers, and such people; and Ministers
+ never talk politics in conversation. The Whigs are forming great schemes
+ against the meeting of Parliament, which will be next Tuesday, I still
+ think, without fail; and we hope to hear by then that the peace is ready
+ to sign. The Queen's gout mends daily. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27. I passed a very insipid day, and dined privately with a friend in the
+ neighbourhood. Did I tell you that I have a very fine picture of Lady
+ Orkney,(28) an original, by Sir Godfrey Kneller, three-quarters length? I
+ have it now at home, with a fine frame. Lord Bolingbroke and Lady Masham
+ have promised to sit for me; but I despair of Lord Treasurer; only I hope
+ he will give me a copy, and then I shall have all the pictures of those I
+ really love here; just half a dozen; only I'll make Lord Keeper give me
+ his print in a frame. This letter must go to-morrow, because of sending ME
+ a bill; else it should not till next week, I assure oo. I have little to
+ do now with my pen; for my grand business stops till they are more
+ pressing, and till something or other happens; and I believe I shall
+ return with disgust to finish it, it is so very laborious. Sir Thomas
+ Hanmer has my papers now. And hat is MD doing now? Oh, at ombre with the
+ Dean always on Friday night, with Mrs. Walls. Pray don't play at small
+ games. I stood by, t'other night, while the Duke d'Atree(29) lost six
+ times with manilio, basto, and three small trumps; and Lady Jersey won
+ above twenty pounds. Nite dee richar(30) MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28. I was at Court to-day, when the Abbe Gaultier whispered me that a
+ courier was just come with an account that the French King had consented
+ to all the Queen's demands, and his consent was carried to Utrecht, and
+ the peace will be signed in a few days. I suppose the general peace cannot
+ be so soon ready; but that is no matter. The news presently ran about the
+ Court. I saw the Queen carried out in her chair, to take the air in the
+ garden. I met Griffin at Court, and he told me that orders were sent to
+ examine Filby; and, if he be fit, to make him (I think he called it) an
+ assistant; I don't know what, Supervisor, I think; but it is some
+ employment a good deal better than his own. The Parliament will have
+ another short prorogation, though it is not known yet. I dined with Lord
+ Treasurer and his Saturday company, and left him at eight to put this in
+ the post-office time enough. And now I must bid oo farewell, deelest
+ richar Ppt. God bless oo ever, and rove Pdfr. Farewell MD MD MD FW FW FW
+ FW ME ME ME Lele Lele.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0064" id="link2H_4_0064">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 61.(1)
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, March 1, 1712-13.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ 'Tis out of my head whether I answered all your letter in my last
+ yesterday or no. I think I was in haste, and could not: but now I see I
+ answered a good deal of it; no, only about your brother, and ME's bill. I
+ dined with Lady Orkney, and we talked politics till eleven at night; and,
+ as usual, found everything wrong, and put ourselves out of humour. Yes, I
+ have Lady Giffard's picture sent me by your mother. It is boxed up at a
+ place where my other things are. I have goods in two or three places; and
+ when I leave a lodging, I box up the books I get (for I always get some),
+ and come naked into a new lodging; and so on. Talk not to me of deaneries;
+ I know less of that than ever by much. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. I went to-day into the City to see Pat Rolt,(2) who lodges with a City
+ cousin, a daughter of coz Cleve; (you are much the wiser). I had never
+ been at her house before. My he-coz Thompson the butcher is dead, or
+ dying. I dined with my printer, and walked home, and went to sit with Lady
+ Clarges. I found four of them at whist; Lady Godolphin(3) was one. I sat
+ by her, and talked of her cards, etc., but she would not give me one look,
+ nor say a word to me. She refused some time ago to be acquainted with me.
+ You know she is Lord Marlborough's eldest daughter. She is a fool for her
+ pains, and I'll pull her down. What can I do for Dr. Smith's daughter's
+ husband? I have no personal credit with any of the Commissioners. I'll
+ speak to Keatley;(4) but I believe it will signify nothing. In the Customs
+ people must rise by degrees, and he must at first take what is very low,
+ if he be qualified for that. Ppt mistakes me; I am not angry at your
+ recommending anyone to me, provided you will take my answer. Some things
+ are in my way, and then I serve those I can. But people will not
+ distinguish, but take things ill, when I have no power; but Ppt is wiser.
+ And employments in general are very hard to be got. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. I dined to-day with Lord Treasurer, who chid me for my absence, which
+ was only from Saturday last. The Parliament was again prorogued for a
+ week, and I suppose the peace will be ready by then, and the Queen will be
+ able to be brought to the House, and make her speech. I saw Dr.
+ Griffith(5) two or three months ago, at a Latin play at Westminster; but
+ did not speak to him. I hope he will not die; I should be sorry for Ppt's
+ sake; he is very tender of her. I have long lost all my colds, and the
+ weather mends a little. I take some steel drops, and my head is pretty
+ well. I walk when I can, but am grown very idle; and, not finishing my
+ thing, I gamble(6) abroad and play at ombre. I shall be more careful in my
+ physic than Mrs. Price: 'tis not a farthing matter her death, I think; and
+ so I say no more to-night, but will read a dull book, and go sleep. Nite
+ dee MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. Mr. Ford has been this half-year inviting me to dine at his lodgings:
+ so I did to-day, and brought the Provost and Dr. Parnell with me, and my
+ friend Lewis was there. Parnell went away, and the other three played at
+ ombre, and I looked on; which I love, and would not play. Tisdall is a
+ pretty fellow, as you say; and when I come back to Ireland with nothing,
+ he will condole with me with abundance of secret pleasure. I believe I
+ told you what he wrote to me, that I have saved England, and he
+ Ireland;(7) but I can bear that. I have learned to hear and see, and say
+ nothing. I was to see the Duchess of Hamilton to-day, and met Blith(8) of
+ Ireland just going out of her house into his coach. I asked her how she
+ came to receive young fellows. It seems he had a ball in the Duke of
+ Hamilton's house when the Duke died; and the Duchess got an advertisement
+ put in the Postboy,(9) reflecting on the ball, because the Marlborough
+ daughters(10) were there; and Blith came to beg the Duchess's pardon, and
+ clear himself. He's a sad dog. Nite poo dee deelest MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. Lady Masham has miscarried; but is well almost again. I have many
+ visits to-day. I met Blith at the Duke of Ormond's; and he begged me to
+ carry him to the Duchess of Hamilton, to beg her pardon again. I did on
+ purpose to see how the blunderbuss behaved himself; but I begged the
+ Duchess to use him mercifully, for she is the devil of a teaser. The good
+ of it is, she ought to beg his pardon, for he meant no harm; yet she would
+ not allow him to put in an advertisement to clear himself from hers,
+ though hers was all a lie. He appealed to me, and I gravely gave it
+ against him. I was at Court to-day, and the foreign Ministers have got a
+ trick of employing me to speak for them to Lord Treasurer and Lord
+ Bolingbroke; which I do when the case is reasonable. The College(11) need
+ not fear; I will not be their Governor. I dined with Sir Thomas Hanmer and
+ his Duchess.(12) The Duke of Ormond was there, but we parted soon, and I
+ went to visit Lord Pembroke for the first time; but it was to see some
+ curious books. Lord Cholmondeley(13) came in; but I would not talk to him,
+ though he made many advances. I hate the scoundrel for all he is your
+ Griffith's friend.&mdash;Yes, yes, I am abused enough, if that be all.
+ Nite sollahs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. I was to-day at an auction of pictures with Pratt,(14) and laid out two
+ pound five shillings for a picture of Titian, and if it were a Titian it
+ would be worth twice as many pounds. If I am cheated, I'll part with it to
+ Lord Masham: if it be a bargain, I'll keep it to myself. That's my
+ conscience. But I made Pratt buy several pictures for Lord Masham. Pratt
+ is a great virtuoso that way. I dined with Lord Treasurer, but made him go
+ to Court at eight. I always tease him to be gone. I thought to have made
+ Parnell dine with him, but he was ill; his head is out of order like mine,
+ but more constant, poor boy!&mdash;I was at Lord Treasurer's levee with
+ the Provost, to ask a book for the College.&mdash;I never go to his levee,
+ unless to present somebody. For all oor rallying, saucy(15) Ppt, as hope
+ saved, I expected they would have decided about me long ago; and as hope
+ saved, as soon as ever things are given away and I not provided for, I
+ will be gone with the very first opportunity, and put up bag and baggage.
+ But people are slower than can be thought. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. Yes, I hope Leigh will soon be gone, a p&mdash; on him! I met him once,
+ and he talked gravely to me of not seeing the Irish bishops here, and the
+ Irish gentlemen; but I believe my answers fretted him enough. I would not
+ dine with Lord Treasurer to-day, though it was Saturday (for he has
+ engaged me for to-morrow), but went and dined with Lord Masham, and played
+ at ombre, sixpenny running ombre, for three hours. There were three
+ voles(16) against me, and I was once a great loser, but came off for three
+ shillings and sixpence. One may easily lose five guineas at it. Lady
+ Orkney is gone out of town to-day, and I could not see her for laziness,
+ but writ to her. She has left me some physic. Fais, I never knew MD's
+ politics before, and I think it pretty extraordinary, and a great
+ compliment to you, and I believe never three people conversed so much with
+ so little politics. I avoid all conversation with the other party; it is
+ not to be borne, and I am sorry for it. O yes, things (are) very dear. DD
+ must come in at last with DD's two eggs a penny. There the proverb was
+ well applied. Parvisol has sent me a bill of fifty pounds, as I ordered
+ him, which, I hope, will serve me, and bring me over. Pray God MD does not
+ be delayed for it; but I have had very little from him this long time. I
+ was not at Court to-day; a wonder! Nite sollahs... Pdfr.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. Oo must know, I give chocolate almost every day to two or three people
+ that I suffer to come to see me in a morning. My man begins to lie pretty
+ well. 'Tis nothing for people to be denied ten times. My man knows all I
+ will see, and denies me to everybody else. This is the day of the Queen's
+ coming to the Crown, and the day Lord Treasurer was stabbed by Guiscard. I
+ was at Court, where everybody had their Birthday clothes on, and I dined
+ with Lord Treasurer, who was very fine. He showed me some of the Queen's
+ speech, which I corrected in several places, and penned the vote of
+ address of thanks for the speech; but I was of opinion the House should
+ not sit on Tuesday next, unless they hear the peace is signed; that is,
+ provided they are sure it will be signed the week after, and so have one
+ scolding for all. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. Lord Treasurer would have had me dine with him to-day; he desired me
+ last night, but I refused, because he would not keep the day of his
+ stabbing with all the Cabinet, as he intended: so I dined with my friend
+ Lewis; and the Provost and Parnell, and Ford, was with us. I lost sixteen
+ shillings at ombre; I don't like it, as etc. At night Lewis brought us
+ word that the Parliament does not sit to-morrow. I hope they are sure of
+ the peace by next week, and then they are right in my opinion: otherwise I
+ think they have done wrong, and might have sat three weeks ago. People
+ will grumble; but Lord Treasurer cares not a rush. Lord Keeper is suddenly
+ taken ill of a quinsy, and some lords are commissioned, I think Lord
+ Trevor,(17) to prorogue the Parliament in his stead. You never saw a town
+ so full of ferment and expectation. Mr. Pope has published a fine poem,
+ called Windsor Forest.(18) Read it. Nite.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. I was early this morning to see Lord Bolingbroke. I find he was of
+ opinion the Parliament should sit; and says they are not sure the peace
+ will be signed next week. The prorogation is to this day se'nnight. I went
+ to look on a library I am going to buy, if we can agree. I have offered a
+ hundred and twenty pounds, and will give ten more. Lord Bolingbroke will
+ lend me the money. I was two hours poring on the books. I will sell some
+ of them, and keep the rest; but I doubt they won't take the money. I dined
+ in the City, and sat an hour in the evening with Lord Treasurer, who was
+ in very good humour; but reproached me for not dining with him yesterday
+ and to-day. What will all this come to? Lord Keeper had a pretty good
+ night, and is better. I was in pain for him. How do oo do sollahs?... Nite
+ MD.(19)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. I was this morning to visit the Duke and Duchess of Ormond, and the
+ Duchess of Hamilton, and went with the Provost to an auction of pictures,
+ and laid out fourteen shillings. I am in for it, if I had money; but I
+ doubt I shall be undone; for Sir Andrew Fountaine invited the Provost and
+ me to dine with him, and play at ombre, when I fairly lost fourteen
+ shillings. Fais, it won't do; and I shall be out of conceit with play this
+ good while. I am come home; and it is late, and my puppy let out my fire,
+ and I am gone to bed and writing there, and it is past twelve a good
+ while. Went out four matadores and a trump in black, and was bested. Vely
+ bad, fais! Nite my deelest logues MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. I was at another auction of pictures to-day, and a great auction it
+ was. I made Lord Masham lay out forty pounds. There were pictures sold of
+ twice as much value apiece. Our Society met to-day at the Duke of
+ Beaufort's: a prodigious fine dinner, which I hate; but we did some
+ business. Our printer was to attend us, as usual; and the Chancellor of
+ the Exchequer sent the author of the Examiner(20) twenty guineas. He is an
+ ingenious fellow, but the most confounded vain coxcomb in the world, so
+ that I dare not let him see me, nor am acquainted with him. I had much
+ discourse with the Duke of Ormond this morning, and am driving some points
+ to secure us all in case of accidents, etc.(21) I left the Society at
+ seven. I can't drink now at all with any pleasure. I love white Portugal
+ wine better than claret, champagne, or burgundy. I have a sad vulgar
+ appetite. I remember Ppt used to maunder, when I came from a great dinner,
+ and DD had but a bit of mutton. I cannot endure above one dish; nor ever
+ could since I was a boy, and loved stuffing. It was a fine day, which is a
+ rarity with us, I assure (you). Never fair two days together. Nite dee MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. I had a rabble of Irish parsons this morning drinking my chocolate. I
+ cannot remember appointments. I was to have supped last night with the
+ Swedish Envoy at his house, and some other company, but forgot it; and he
+ rallied me to-day at Lord Bolingbroke's, who excused me, saying, the Envoy
+ ought not to be angry, because I serve Lord Treasurer and him the same
+ way. For that reason, I very seldom promise to go anywhere. I dined with
+ Lord Treasurer, who chid me for being absent so long, as he always does if
+ I miss a day. I sat three hours this evening with Lady Jersey; but the
+ first two hours she was at ombre with some company. I left Lord Treasurer
+ at eight: I fancied he was a little thoughtful, for he was playing with an
+ orange by fits, which, I told him, among common men looked like the
+ spleen. This letter shall not go to-morrow; no haste, ung oomens; nothing
+ that presses. I promised but once in three weeks, and I am better than my
+ word. I wish the peace may be ready, I mean that we have notice it is
+ signed, before Tuesday; otherwise the grumbling will much increase. Nite
+ logues.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. It was a lovely day this, and I took the advantage of walking a good
+ deal in the Park, before I went to Court. Colonel Disney, one of our
+ Society, is ill of a fever, and, we fear, in great danger. We all love him
+ mightily, and he would be a great loss. I doubt I shall not buy the
+ library; for a roguey bookseller has offered sixty pounds more than I
+ designed to give; so you see I meant to have a good bargain. I dined with
+ Lord Treasurer and his Saturday company; but there were but seven at
+ table. Lord Peterborrow is ill, and spits blood, with a bruise he got
+ before he left England; but, I believe, an Italian lady he has brought
+ over is the cause that his illness returns. You know old Lady Bellasis(22)
+ is dead at last? She has left Lord Berkeley of Stratton(23) one of her
+ executors, and it will be of great advantage to him; they say above ten
+ thousand pounds. I stayed with Lord Treasurer upon business, after the
+ company was gone; but I dare not tell you upon what. My letters would be
+ good memoirs, if I durst venture to say a thousand things that pass; but I
+ hear so much of letters opening at your post-office that I am fearful,
+ etc., and so good-nite, sollahs, rove Pdfr, MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. Lord Treasurer engaged me to dine with him again to-day, and I had
+ ready what he wanted; but he would not see it, but put me off till
+ to-morrow. The Queen goes to chapel now. She is carried in an open chair,
+ and will be well enough to go to Parliament on Tuesday, if the Houses
+ meet, which is not yet certain; neither, indeed, can the Ministers
+ themselves tell; for it depends on winds and weather, and circumstances of
+ negotiation. However, we go on as if it was certainly to meet; and I am to
+ be at Lord Treasurer's to-morrow, upon that supposition, to settle some
+ things relating that way. Ppt(24) may understand me. The doctors tell me
+ that if poor Colonel Disney does not get some sleep to-night, he must die.
+ What care you? Ah! but I do care. He is one of our Society; a fellow of
+ abundance of humour; an old battered rake, but very honest, not an old
+ man, but an old rake. It was he that said of Jenny Kingdom,(25) the maid
+ of honour, who is a little old, that, since she could not get a husband,
+ the Queen should give her a brevet to act as a married woman. You don't
+ understand this. They give brevets to majors and captains to act as
+ colonels in the army. Brevets are commissions. Ask soldiers, dull sollahs.
+ Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. I was at Lord Treasurer's before he came; and, as he entered, he told
+ me the Parliament was prorogued till Thursday se'nnight. They have had
+ some expresses, by which they count that the peace may be signed by that
+ time; at least, that France, Holland, and we, will sign some articles, by
+ which we shall engage to sign the peace when it is ready: but Spain has no
+ Minister there; for Monteleon, who is to be their Ambassador at Utrecht,
+ is not yet gone from hence; and till he is there, the Spaniards can sign
+ no peace: and (of) one thing take notice, that a general peace can hardly
+ be finished these two months, so as to be proclaimed here; for, after
+ signing, it must be ratified; that is, confirmed by the several princes at
+ their Courts, which to Spain will cost a month; for we must have notice
+ that it is ratified in all Courts before we can proclaim it. So be not in
+ too much haste. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. The Irish folks were disappointed that the Parliament did not meet
+ to-day, because it was St. Patrick's Day; and the Mall was so full of
+ crosses that I thought all the world was Irish. Miss Ashe is almost quite
+ well, and I see the Bishop, but shall not yet go to his house. I dined
+ again with Lord Treasurer; but the Parliament being prorogued, I must keep
+ what I have till next week: for I believe he will not see it till just the
+ evening before the session. He has engaged me to dine with him again
+ to-morrow, though I did all I could to put it off; but I don't care to
+ disoblige him. Nite dee sollahs 'tis late. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. I have now dined six days successively with Lord Treasurer; but
+ to-night I stole away while he was talking with somebody else, and so am
+ at liberty to-morrow. There was a flying report of a general cessation of
+ arms: everybody had it at Court; but, I believe, there is nothing in it. I
+ asked a certain French Minister how things went. And he whispered me in
+ French, "Your Plenipotentiaries and ours play the fool." None of us,
+ indeed, approve of the conduct of either at this time; but Lord Treasurer
+ was in full good-humour for all that. He had invited a good many of his
+ relations; and, of a dozen at table, they were all of the Harley family
+ but myself. Disney is recovering, though you don't care a straw. Dilly
+ murders us with his IF puns. You know them.... (26) Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. The Bishop of Clogher has made an IF pun that he is mighty proud of,
+ and designs to send it over to his brother Tom. But Sir Andrew Fountaine
+ has wrote to Tom Ashe last post, and told him the pun, and desired him to
+ send it over to the Bishop as his own; and, if it succeeds, 'twill be a
+ pure bite. The Bishop will tell it us as a wonder that he and his brother
+ should jump so exactly. I'll tell you the pun:&mdash;If there was a
+ hackney coach at Mr. Pooley's(27) door, what town in Egypt would it be?
+ Why, it would be Hecatompolis; Hack at Tom Pooley's. "Sillly," says Ppt. I
+ dined with a private friend to-day; for our Society, I told you, meet but
+ once a fortnight. I have not seen Fanny Manley yet; I can't help it. Lady
+ Orkney is come to town: why, she was at her country house; hat(28) care
+ you? Nite darling (?) dee MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. Dilly read me a letter to-day from Ppt. She seems to have scratched
+ her head when she writ it. 'Tis a sad thing to write to people without
+ tact. There you say, you hear I was going to Bath. No such thing; I am
+ pretty well, I thank God. The town is now sending me to Savoy.(29) Forty
+ people have given me joy of it, yet there is not the least truth that I
+ know in it. I was at an auction of pictures, but bought none. I was so
+ glad of my liberty, that I would dine nowhere; but, the weather being
+ fine, I sauntered into the City, and ate a bit about five, and then supped
+ at Mr. Burke's(30) your Accountant-General, who had been engaging me this
+ month. The Bishop of Clogher was to have been there, but was hindered by
+ Lord Paget's(31) funeral. The Provost and I sat till one o'clock; and, if
+ that be not late, I don't know what is late. Parnell's poem will be
+ published on Monday, and to-morrow I design he shall present it to Lord
+ Treasurer and Lord Bolingbroke at Court. The poor lad is almost always out
+ of order with his head. Burke's wife is his sister. She has a little of
+ the pert Irish way. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21. Morning. I will now finish my letter; for company will come, and a
+ stir, and a clutter; and I'll keep the letter in my pottick,(32) and give
+ it into the post myself. I must go to Court, and you know on Saturdays I
+ dine with Lord Treasurer, of course. Farewell, deelest MD MD MD, FW FW FW,
+ MD ME ME ME Lele sollahs.(33)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0065" id="link2H_4_0065">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 62.(1)
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, March 21, 1712-13.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I gave your letter in this night. I dined with Lord Treasurer to-day, and
+ find he has been at a meeting at Lord Halifax's house, with four principal
+ Whigs; but he is resolved to begin a speech against them when the
+ Parliament sits; and I have begged that the Ministers may have a meeting
+ on purpose to settle that matter, and let us be the attackers; and I
+ believe it will come to something, for the Whigs intend to attack the
+ Ministers: and if, instead of that, the Ministers attack the Whigs, it
+ will be better: and farther, I believe we shall attack them on those very
+ points they intend to attack us. The Parliament will be again prorogued
+ for a fortnight, because of Passion Week. I forgot to tell you that Mr.
+ Griffin has given Ppt's brother(2) a new employment, about ten pounds a
+ year better than his former; but more remote, and consequently cheaper. I
+ wish I could have done better, and hope oo will take what can be done in
+ good part, and that oo brother will not dislike it.&mdash;Nite own dear...
+ MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22. I dined to-day with Lord Steward.(3) There Frank Annesley(4) (a
+ Parliament-man) told me he had heard that I had wrote to my friends in
+ Ireland to keep firm to the Whig interest; for that Lord Treasurer would
+ certainly declare for it after the peace. Annesley said twenty people had
+ told him this. You must know this is what they endeavour to report of Lord
+ Treasurer, that he designs to declare for the Whigs; and a Scotch fellow
+ has wrote the same to Scotland; and his meeting with those lords gives
+ occasion to such reports. Let me henceforth call Lord Treasurer Eltee,
+ because possibly my letters may be opened. Pray remember Eltee. You know
+ the reason; L.T. and Eltee pronounced the same way. Stay, 'tis five weeks
+ since I had a letter from MD. I allow you six. You see why I cannot come
+ over the beginning of April; whoever has to do with this Ministry can fix
+ no time: but as(5) hope saved, it is not Pdfr's fault. Pay don't blame poo
+ Pdfr. Nite deelest logues MD.(6)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23. I dined to-day at Sir Thomas Hanmer's, by an old appointment: there
+ was the Duke of Ormond, and Lord and Lady Orkney. I left them at six.
+ Everybody is as sour as vinegar. I endeavour to keep a firm friendship
+ between the Duke of Ormond and Eltee. (Oo know who Eltee is, or have oo
+ fordot already?) I have great designs, if I can compass them; but delay is
+ rooted in Eltee's heart; yet the fault is not altogether there, that
+ things are no better. Here is the cursedest libel in verse come out that
+ ever was seen, called The Ambassadress;(7) it is very dull, too; it has
+ been printed three or four different ways, and is handed about, but not
+ sold. It abuses the Queen horribly. The Examiner has cleared me to-day of
+ being author of his paper, and done it with great civilities to me.(8) I
+ hope it will stop people's mouths; if not, they must go on and be hanged,
+ I care not. 'Tis terribly rainy weather, I'll go sleep. Nite deelest MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24. It rained all this day, and ruined me in coach-hire. I went to Colonel
+ Disney, who is past danger. Then I visited Lord Keeper, who was at dinner;
+ but I would not dine with him, but drove to Lord Treasurer (Eltee I mean),
+ paid the coachman, and went in; but he dined abroad: so I was forced to
+ call the coachman again, and went to Lord Bolingbroke's. He dined abroad
+ too; and at Lord Dupplin's I alighted, and by good luck got a dinner
+ there, and then went to the Latin play at Westminster School, acted by the
+ boys; and Lord Treasurer (Eltee I mean again) honoured them with his
+ presence. Lady Masham's eldest son, about two years old, is ill, and I am
+ afraid will not live: she is full of grief, and I pity and am angry with
+ her. Four shillings to-day in coach-hire; fais, it won't do. Our peace
+ will certainly be ready by Thursday fortnight; but our Plenipotentiaries
+ were to blame that it was not done already. They thought their powers were
+ not full enough to sign the peace, unless every Prince was ready, which
+ cannot yet be; for Spain has no Minister yet at Utrecht; but now ours have
+ new orders. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25. Weather worse than ever; terrible rain all day, but I was resolved I
+ would spend no more money. I went to an auction of pictures with Dr.
+ Pratt, and there met the Duke of Beaufort, who promised to come with me to
+ Court, but did not. So a coach I got, and went to Court, and did some
+ little business there, but was forced to go home; for oo must understand I
+ take a little physic over-night, which works me next day. Lady Orkney is
+ my physician. It is hiera picra,(9) two spoonfuls, devilish stuff! I
+ thought to have dined with Eltee, but would not, merely to save a
+ shilling; but I dined privately with a friend, and played at ombre, and
+ won six shillings. Here are several people of quality lately dead of the
+ smallpox. I have not yet seen Miss Ashe, but hear she is well. The Bishop
+ of Clogher has bought abundance of pictures, and Dr. Pratt has got him
+ very good pennyworths.(10) I can get no walks, the weather is so bad. Is
+ it so with oo, sollahs?... (11)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26. Though it was shaving-day, head and beard, yet I was out early to see
+ Lord Bolingbroke, and talk over affairs with him; and then I went to the
+ Duke of Ormond's, and so to Court, where the Ministers did not come,
+ because the Parliament was prorogued till this day fortnight. We had
+ terrible rain and hail to-day. Our Society met this day, but I left them
+ before seven, and went to Sir A(ndrew) F(ountaine), and played at ombre
+ with him and Sir Thomas Clarges, till ten, and then went to Sir Thomas
+ Hanmer. His wife, the Duchess of Grafton, left us after a little while,
+ and I stayed with him about an hour, upon some affairs, etc. Lord
+ Bolingbroke left us at the Society before I went; for there is an express
+ from Utrecht, but I know not yet what it contains; only I know the
+ Ministers expect the peace will be signed in a week, which is a week
+ before the session. Nite, MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27. Parnell's poem is mightily esteemed; but poetry sells ill. I am
+ plagued with that... (12) poor Harrison's mother; you would laugh to see
+ how cautious I am of paying her the 100 pounds I received for her son from
+ the Treasury. I have asked every creature I know whether I may do it
+ safely, yet durst not venture, till my Lord Keeper assured me there was no
+ danger. I have not paid her, but will in a day or two: though I have a
+ great mind to stay till Ppt sends me her opinion, because Ppt is a great
+ lawyer. I dined to-day with a mixture of people at a Scotchman's, who made
+ the invitation to Mr. Lewis and me, and has some design upon us, which we
+ know very well. I went afterwards to see a famous moving picture,(13) and
+ I never saw anything so pretty. You see a sea ten miles wide, a town on
+ t'other end, and ships sailing in the sea, and discharging their cannon.
+ You see a great sky, with moon and stars, etc. I'm a fool. Nite, dee MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28. I had a mighty levee to-day. I deny myself to everybody, except about
+ half a dozen, and they were all here, and Mr. Addison was one, and I had
+ chocolate twice, which I don't like. Our rainy weather continues.
+ Coach-hire goes deep. I dined with Eltee and his Saturday company, as
+ usual, and could not get away till nine. Lord Peterborow was making long
+ harangues, and Eltee kept me in spite. Then I went to see the Bishop of
+ Ossory, who had engaged me in the morning; he is going to Ireland. The
+ Bishop of Killaloe(14) and Tom Leigh was with us. The latter had wholly
+ changed his style, by seeing how the bishops behaved themselves, and he
+ seemed to think me one of more importance than I really am. I put the ill
+ conduct of the bishops about the First-Fruits, with relation to Eltee and
+ me, strongly upon Killaloe, and showed how it had hindered me from getting
+ a better thing for them, called the Crown rents, which the Queen had
+ promised. He had nothing to say, but was humble, and desired my interest
+ in that and some other things. This letter is half done in a week: I
+ believe oo will have it next. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29. I have been employed in endeavouring to save one of your junior
+ Fellows,(15) who came over here for a dispensation from taking orders,
+ and, in soliciting it, has run out his time, and now his fellowship is
+ void, if the College pleases, unless the Queen suspends the execution, and
+ gives him time to take orders. I spoke to all the Ministers yesterday
+ about it; but they say the Queen is angry, and thought it was a trick to
+ deceive her; and she is positive, and so the man must be ruined, for I
+ cannot help him. I never saw him in my life; but the case was so hard, I
+ could not forbear interposing. Your Government recommended him to the Duke
+ of Ormond, and he thought they would grant it; and by the time it was
+ refused, the fellowship by rigour is forfeited. I dined with Dr. Arbuthnot
+ (one of my brothers) at his lodgings in Chelsea, and was there at chapel;
+ and the altar put me in mind of Tisdall's outlandish would(16) at your
+ hospital for the soldiers. I was not at Court to-day, and I hear the Queen
+ was not at church. Perhaps the gout has seized her again. Terrible rain
+ all day. Have oo such weather? Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30. Morning. I was naming some time ago, to a certain person, another
+ certain person, that was very deserving, and poor and sickly; and t'other,
+ that first certain person, gave me a hundred pounds to give the other,
+ which I have not yet done. The person who is to have it never saw the
+ giver, nor expects one farthing, nor has the least knowledge or
+ imagination of it; so I believe it will be a very agreeable surprise; for
+ I think it is a handsome present enough. At night I dined in the City, at
+ Pontack's,(17) with Lord Dupplin, and some others. We were treated by one
+ Colonel Cleland,(18) who has a mind to be Governor of Barbados, and is
+ laying these long traps for me and others, to engage our interests for
+ him. He is a true Scotchman. I paid the hundred pounds this evening, and
+ it was an agreeable surprise to the receiver. We reckon the peace is now
+ signed, and that we shall have it in three days. I believe it is pretty
+ sure. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 31. I thought to-day on Ppt when she told me she suppose(d) I was
+ acquainted with the steward, when I was giving myself airs of being at
+ some lord's house. Sir Andrew Fountaine invited the Bishop of Clogher and
+ me, and some others, to dine where he did; and he carried us to the Duke
+ of Kent's,(19) who was gone out of town; but the steward treated us nobly,
+ and showed us the fine pictures, etc. I have not yet seen Miss Ashe. I
+ wait till she has been abroad, and taken the air. This evening Lady
+ Masham, Dr. Arbuthnot, and I, were contriving a lie for to-morrow, that
+ Mr. Noble,(20) who was hanged last Saturday, was recovered by his friends,
+ and then seized again by the sheriff, and is now in a messenger's hands at
+ the Black Swan in Holborn. We are all to send to our friends, to know
+ whether they have heard anything of it, and so we hope it will spread.
+ However, we shall do our endeavours; nothing shall be wanting on our
+ parts, and leave the rest to fortune. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ April 1. We had no success in our story, though I sent my man to several
+ houses, to inquire among the footmen, without letting him into the secret;
+ but I doubt my colleagues did not contribute as they ought. Parnell and I
+ dined with Darteneuf(21) to-day. You have heard of Darteneuf: I have told
+ you of Darteneuf. After dinner we all went to Lord Bolingbroke's, who had
+ desired me to dine with him; but I would not, because I heard it was to
+ look over a dull poem of one parson Trapp(22) upon the peace. The Swedish
+ Envoy told me to-day at Court that he was in great apprehensions about his
+ master;(23) and indeed we are afraid that prince has(24) died among those
+ Turkish dogs. I prevailed on Lord Bolingbroke to invite Mr. Addison to
+ dine with him on Good Friday. I suppose we shall be mighty mannerly.
+ Addison is to have a play of his acted on Friday in Easter Week: 'tis a
+ tragedy, called Cato; I saw it unfinished some years ago.(25) Did I tell
+ you that Steele has begun a new daily paper, called the Guardian?(26) they
+ say good for nothing. I have not seen it. Nite dee MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. I was this morning with Lord Bolingbroke, and he tells me a Spanish
+ courier is just come, with the news that the King of Spain has agreed to
+ everything that the Queen desires; and the Duke d'Ossuna has left Paris in
+ order to his journey to Utrecht. I was prevailed on to come home with
+ Trapp, and read his poem and correct it; but it was good for nothing.
+ While I was thus employed, Sir Thomas Hanmer came up to my chamber, and
+ balked me of a journey he and I intended this week to Lord Orkney's at
+ Cliffden;(27) but he is not well, and his physician will not let him
+ undertake such a journey. I intended to dine with Lord Treasurer; but
+ going to see Colonel Disney, who lives with General Withers,(28) I liked
+ the General's little dinner so well, that I stayed and took share of it,
+ and did not go to Lord Treasurer till six, where I found Dr. Sacheverell,
+ who told us that the bookseller had given him 100 pounds for his
+ sermon,(29) preached last Sunday, and intended to print 30,000: I believe
+ he will be confoundedly bit, and will hardly sell above half. I have fires
+ still, though April has begun, against my old maxim; but the weather is
+ wet and cold. I never saw such a long run of ill weather in my life. Nite
+ dee logues MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. I was at the Queen's chapel to-day, but she was not there. Mr. St.
+ John, Lord Bolingbroke's brother, came this day at noon with an express
+ from Utrecht, that the peace is signed by all the Ministers there, but
+ those of the Emperor, who will likewise sign in a few days; so that now
+ the great work is in effect done, and I believe it will appear a most
+ excellent peace for Europe, particularly for England. Addison and I, and
+ some others, dined with Lord Bolingbroke, and sat with him till twelve. We
+ were very civil, but yet when we grew warm, we talked in a friendly manner
+ of party. Addison raised his objections, and Lord Bolingbroke answered
+ them with great complaisance. Addison began Lord Somers's health, which
+ went about; but I bid him not name Lord Wharton's, for I would not pledge
+ it; and I told Lord Bolingbroke frankly that Addison loved Lord Wharton as
+ little as I did: so we laughed, etc. Well, but you are glad of the peace,
+ you Ppt the Trimmer, are not you? As for DD I don't doubt her. Why, now,
+ if I did not think Ppt had been a violent Tory, and DD the greater Whig of
+ the two! 'Tis late. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. This Passion Week, people are so demure, especially this last day, that
+ I told Dilly, who called here, that I would dine with him, and so I did,
+ faith; and had a small shoulder of mutton of my own bespeaking. It rained
+ all day. I came home at seven, and have never stirred out, but have been
+ reading Sacheverell's long dull sermon, which he sent me. It is the first
+ sermon since his suspension is expired; but not a word in it upon the
+ occasion, except two or three remote hints. The Bishop of Clogher has been
+ sadly bit by Tom Ashe, who sent him a pun, which the Bishop had made, and
+ designed to send to him, but delayed it; and Lord Pembroke and I made Sir
+ Andrew Fountaine write it to Tom. I believe I told you of it in my last;
+ it succeeded right, and the Bishop was wondering to Lord Pembroke how he
+ and his brother could hit on the same thing. I'll go to bed soon, for I
+ must be at church by eight to-morrow, Easter Day. Nite dee MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. Warburton(30) wrote to me two letters about a living of one Foulkes,
+ who is lately dead in the county of Meath. My answer is, that before I
+ received the first letter, General Gorges(31) had recommended a friend of
+ his to the Duke of Ormond, which was the first time I heard of its
+ vacancy, and it was the Provost told me of it. I believe verily that
+ Foulkes was not dead when Gorges recommended the other: for Warburton's
+ last letter said that Foulkes was dead the day before the date.&mdash;This
+ has prevented me from serving Warburton, as I would have done, if I had
+ received early notice enough. Pray say or write this to Warburton, to
+ justify me to him. I was at church at eight this morning, and dressed and
+ shaved after I came back, but was too late at Court; and Lord Abingdon(32)
+ was like to have snapped me for dinner, and I believe will fall out with
+ me for refusing him; but I hate dining with them, and I dined with a
+ private friend, and took two or three good walks; for it was a very fine
+ day, the first we have had a great while. Remember, was Easter Day a fine
+ day with you? I have sat with Lady Worsley till now. Nite dee MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. I was this morning at ten at the rehearsal of Mr. Addison's play,
+ called Cato, which is to be acted on Friday. There were not above half a
+ score of us to see it. We stood on the stage, and it was foolish enough to
+ see the actors prompted every moment, and the poet directing them; and the
+ drab that acts Cato's daughter,(33) out in the midst of a passionate part,
+ and then calling out, "What's next?" The Bishop of Clogher was there too;
+ but he stood privately in a gallery. I went to dine with Lord Treasurer,
+ but he was gone to Wimbledon, his daughter Caermarthen's(34) country seat,
+ seven miles off. So I went back, and dined privately with Mr. Addison,
+ whom I had left to go to Lord Treasurer. I keep fires yet; I am very
+ extravagant. I sat this evening with Sir A. Fountaine, and we amused
+ ourselves with making IFS for Dilly. It is rainy weather again; nevle saw
+ ze rike.(35) This letter shall go to-morrow; remember, ung oomens, it is
+ seven weeks since oor last, and I allow oo but five weeks; but oo have
+ been galloping into the country to Swanton's.(36) O pray tell Swanton I
+ had his letter, but cannot contrive how to serve him. If a Governor were
+ to go over, I would recommend him as far as lay in my power, but I can do
+ no more: and you know all employments in Ireland, at least almost all, are
+ engaged in reversions. If I were on the spot, and had credit with a Lord
+ Lieutenant, I would very heartily recommend him; but employments here are
+ no more in my power than the monarchy itself. Nite, dee MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. Morning. I have had a visitor here, that has taken up my time. I have
+ not been abroad, oo may be sure; so I can say nothing to-day, but that I
+ rove MD bettle zan ever, if possibbere. I will put this in the
+ post-office; so I say no more. I write by this post to the Dean, but it is
+ not above two lines; and one enclosed to you, but that enclosed to you is
+ not above three lines; and then one enclosed to the Dean, which he must
+ not have but upon condition of burning it immediately after reading, and
+ that before your eyes; for there are some things in it I would not have
+ liable to accident. You shall only know in general that it is an account
+ of what I have done to serve him in his pretensions on these vacancies,
+ etc. But he must not know that you know so much.(37) Does this perplex
+ you? Hat care I? But rove Pdfr, saucy Pdfr. Farewell, deelest MD MD MD FW
+ FW FW,... ME, MD Lele.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0066" id="link2H_4_0066">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 63.(1)
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, April 7, 1713.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I fancy I marked my last, which I sent this day, wrong; only 61, and it
+ ought to be 62. I dined with Lord Treasurer, and though the business I had
+ with him is something against Thursday, when the Parliament is to meet,
+ and this is Tuesday, yet he put it off till to-morrow. I dare not tell you
+ what it is, lest this letter should miscarry or be opened; but I never saw
+ his fellow for delays. The Parliament will now certainly sit, and
+ everybody's expectations are ready to burst. At a Council to-night the
+ Lord Chief-Justice Parker, a Whig, spoke against the peace; so did Lord
+ Chomley,(2) another Whig, who is Treasurer of the Household. My Lord
+ Keeper(3) was this night made Lord Chancellor. We hope there will soon be
+ some removes. Nite, dee sollahs; Late. Rove Pdfr.(4)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. Lord Chomley (the right name is Cholmondeley) is this day removed from
+ his employment, for his last night's speech; and Sir Richard Temple,(5)
+ Lieutenant-General, the greatest Whig in the army, is turned out; and
+ Lieutenant-General Palmes(6) will be obliged to sell his regiment. This is
+ the first-fruits of a friendship I have established between two great men.
+ I dined with Lord Treasurer, and did the business I had for him to his
+ satisfaction. I won't tell MD what it was.... (7) for zat. The Parliament
+ sits to-morrow for certain. Here is a letter printed in Maccartney's name,
+ vindicating himself from the murder of the Duke of Hamilton. I must give
+ some hints to have it answered; 'tis full of lies, and will give an
+ opportunity of exposing that party. To morrow will be a very important
+ day. All the world will be at Westminster. Lord Treasurer is as easy as a
+ lamb. They are mustering up the proxies of the absent lords; but they are
+ not in any fear of wanting a majority, which death and accidents have
+ increased this year. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. I was this morning with Lord Treasurer, to present to him a young
+ son(8) of the late Earl of Jersey, at the desire of the widow. There I saw
+ the mace and great coach ready for Lord Treasurer, who was going to
+ Parliament. Our Society met to-day; but I expected the Houses would sit
+ longer than I cared to fast; so I dined with a friend, and never inquired
+ how matters went till eight this evening, when I went to Lord Orkney's,
+ where I found Sir Thomas Hanmer. The Queen delivered her speech very well,
+ but a little weaker in her voice. The crowd was vast. The order for the
+ Address(9) was moved, and opposed by Lord Nottingham, Halifax, and Cowper.
+ Lord Treasurer spoke with great spirit and resolution; Lord Peterborow
+ flirted(10) against the Duke of Marlborough (who is in Germany, you know),
+ but it was in answer to one of Halifax's impertinences. The order for an
+ Address passed by a majority of thirty-three, and the Houses rose before
+ six. This is the account I heard at Lord Orkney's. The Bishop of
+ Chester,(11) a high Tory, was against the Court. The Duchess of
+ Marlborough sent for him some months ago, to justify herself to him in
+ relation to the Queen, and showed him letters, and told him stories, which
+ the weak man believed, and was perverted. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. I dined with a cousin in the City, and poor Pat Rolt was there. I have
+ got her rogue of a husband leave to come to England from Port-Mahon. The
+ Whigs are much down; but I reckon they have some scheme in agitation. This
+ Parliament-time hinders our Court meetings on Wednesdays, Thursdays, and
+ Saturdays. I had a great deal of business to-night, which gave me a
+ temptation to be idle, and I lost a dozen shillings at ombre, with Dr.
+ Pratt and another. I have been to see t'other day the Bishop of Clogher
+ and lady, but did not see Miss. It rains every day, and yet we are all
+ over dust. Lady Masham's eldest boy is very ill: I doubt he will not live,
+ and she stays at Kensington to nurse him, which vexes us all. She is so
+ excessively fond, it makes me mad. She should never leave the Queen, but
+ leave everything, to stick to what is so much the interest of the public,
+ as well as her own. This I tell her; but talk to the winds. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. I dined at Lord Treasurer's, with his Saturday company. We had ten at
+ table, all lords but myself and the Chancellor of the Exchequer. Argyle
+ went off at six, and was in very indifferent humour as usual. Duke of
+ Ormond and Lord Bolingbroke were absent. I stayed till near ten. Lord
+ Treasurer showed us a small picture, enamelled work, and set in gold,
+ worth about twenty pounds; a picture, I mean, of the Queen, which she gave
+ to the Duchess of Marlborough, set in diamonds. When the Duchess was
+ leaving England, she took off all the diamonds, and gave the picture to
+ one Mrs. Higgins (an old intriguing woman, whom everybody knows), bidding
+ her make the best of it she could. Lord Treasurer sent to Mrs. Higgins for
+ this picture, and gave her a hundred pounds for it. Was ever such an
+ ungrateful beast as that Duchess? or did you ever hear such a story? I
+ suppose the Whigs will not believe it. Pray, try them. Takes off the
+ diamonds, and gives away the picture to an insignificant woman, as a thing
+ of no consequence: and gives it to her to sell, like a piece of
+ old-fashioned plate. Is she not a detestable slut? Nite deelest MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. I went to Court to-day, on purpose to present Mr. Berkeley,(12) one of
+ your Fellows of Dublin College, to Lord Berkeley of Stratton. That Mr.
+ Berkeley is a very ingenious man, and great philosopher, and I have
+ mentioned him to all the Ministers, and given them some of his writings;
+ and I will favour him as much as I can. This I think I am bound to, in
+ honour and conscience, to use all my little credit toward helping forward
+ men of worth in the world. The Queen was at chapel to-day, and looks well.
+ I dined at Lord Orkney's with the Duke of Ormond, Lord Arran, and Sir
+ Thomas Hanmer. Mr. St. John, Secretary at Utrecht, expects every moment to
+ return there with the ratification of the peace. Did I tell you in my last
+ of Addison's play called Cato, and that I was at the rehearsal of it? Nite
+ MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. This morning my friend, Mr. Lewis, came to me, and showed me an order
+ for a warrant for the three vacant deaneries; but none of them to me. This
+ was what I always foresaw, and received the notice of it better, I
+ believe, than he expected. I bid Mr. Lewis tell Lord Treasurer that I took
+ nothing ill of him but his not giving me timely notice, as he promised to
+ do, if he found the Queen would do nothing for me. At noon, Lord Treasurer
+ hearing I was in Mr. Lewis's office, came to me, and said many things too
+ long to repeat. I told him I had nothing to do but go to Ireland
+ immediately; for I could not, with any reputation, stay longer here,
+ unless I had something honourable immediately given to me. We dined
+ together at the Duke of Ormond's. He there told me he had stopped the
+ warrants for the deans, that what was done for me might be at the same
+ time, and he hoped to compass it to-night; but I believe him not. I told
+ the Duke of Ormond my intentions. He is content Sterne should be a bishop,
+ and I have St. Patrick's; but I believe nothing will come of it, for stay
+ I will not; and so I believe for all oo... (13) oo may see me in Dublin
+ before April ends. I am less out of humour than you would imagine: and if
+ it were not that impertinent people will condole with me, as they used to
+ give me joy, I would value it less. But I will avoid company, and muster
+ up my baggage, and send them next Monday by the carrier to Chester, and
+ come and see my willows, against the expectation of all the world.&mdash;Hat
+ care I? Nite deelest logues, MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. I dined in the City to-day, and ordered a lodging to be got ready for
+ me against I came to pack up my things; for I will leave this end of the
+ town as soon as ever the warrants for the deaneries are out, which are yet
+ stopped. Lord Treasurer told Mr. Lewis that it should be determined
+ to-night: and so he will for(14) a hundred nights. So he said yesterday,
+ but I value it not. My daily journals shall be but short till I get into
+ the City, and then I will send away this, and follow it myself; and design
+ to walk it all the way to Chester, my man and I, by ten miles a day. It
+ will do my health a great deal of good. I shall do it in fourteen days.
+ Nite dee MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. Lord Bolingbroke made me dine with him to-day; he(15) was as good
+ company as ever; and told me the Queen would determine something for me
+ to-night. The dispute is, Windsor or St. Patrick's. I told him I would not
+ stay for their disputes, and he thought I was in the right. Lord Masham
+ told me that Lady Masham is angry I have not been to see her since this
+ business, and desires I will come to-morrow. Nite deelest MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. I was this noon at Lady Masham's, who was just come from Kensington,
+ where her eldest son is sick. She said much to me of what she had talked
+ to the Queen and Lord Treasurer. The poor lady fell a shedding tears
+ openly. She could not bear to think of my having St. Patrick's, etc. I was
+ never more moved than to see so much friendship. I would not stay with
+ her, but went and dined with Dr. Arbuthnot, with Mr. Berkeley, one of your
+ Fellows, whom I have recommended to the Doctor, and to Lord Berkeley of
+ Stratton. Mr. Lewis tells me that the Duke of Ormond has been to-day with
+ the Queen; and she was content that Dr. Sterne should be Bishop of
+ Dromore, and I Dean of St. Patrick's; but then out came Lord Treasurer,
+ and said he would not be satisfied but that I must be Prebend(ary) of
+ Windsor. Thus he perplexes things. I expect neither; but I confess, as
+ much as I love England, I am so angry at this treatment that, if I had my
+ choice, I would rather have St. Patrick's. Lady Masham says she will speak
+ to purpose to the Queen to-morrow. Nite,... dee MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. I went to dine at Lady Masham's to-day, and she was taken ill of a
+ sore throat, and aguish. She spoke to the Queen last night, but had not
+ much time. The Queen says she will determine to-morrow with Lord
+ Treasurer. The warrants for the deaneries are still stopped, for fear I
+ should be gone. Do you think anything will be done? I don't care whether
+ it is or no. In the meantime, I prepare for my journey, and see no great
+ people, nor will see Lord Treasurer any more, if I go. Lord Treasurer told
+ Mr. Lewis it should be done to-night; so he said five nights ago. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. This morning Mr. Lewis sent me word that Lord Treasurer told him the
+ Queen would determine at noon. At three Lord Treasurer sent to me to come
+ to his lodgings at St. James's, and told me the Queen was at last resolved
+ that Dr. Sterne should be Bishop of Dromore, and I Dean of St. Patrick's;
+ and that Sterne's warrant should be drawn immediately. You know the
+ deanery is in the Duke of Ormond's gift; but this is concerted between the
+ Queen, Lord Treasurer, and the Duke of Ormond, to make room for me. I do
+ not know whether it will yet be done; some unlucky accident may yet come.
+ Neither can I feel joy at passing my days in Ireland; and I confess I
+ thought the Ministry would not let me go; but perhaps they can't help it.
+ Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. I forgot to tell you that Lord Treasurer forced me to dine with him
+ yesterday as usual, with his Saturday company; which I did after frequent
+ refusals. To-day I dined with a private friend, and was not at Court.
+ After dinner Mr. Lewis sent me a note, that the Queen stayed till she knew
+ whether the Duke of Ormond approved of Sterne for Bishop. I went this
+ evening, and found the Duke of Ormond at the Cock-pit, and told him, and
+ desired he would go to the Queen, and approve of Sterne. He made
+ objections, desired I would name any other deanery, for he did not like
+ Sterne; that Sterne never went to see him; that he was influenced by the
+ Archbishop of Dublin, etc.; so all now is broken again. I sent out for
+ Lord Treasurer, and told him this. He says all will do well; but I value
+ not what he says. This suspense vexes me worse than anything else. Nite
+ MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. I went to-day, by appointment, to the Cock-pit, to talk with the Duke
+ of Ormond. He repeated the same proposals of any other deanery, etc. I
+ desired he would put me out of the case, and do as he pleased. Then, with
+ great kindness, he said he would consent; but would do it for no man alive
+ but me, etc. And he will speak to the Queen today or to-morrow; so,
+ perhaps, something will come of it. I can't tell. Nite dee dee logues, MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21. The Duke of Ormond has told the Queen he is satisfied that Sterne
+ should be Bishop, and she consents I shall be Dean; and I suppose the
+ warrants will be drawn in a day or two. I dined at an ale-house with
+ Parnell and Berkeley; for I am not in humour to go among the Ministers,
+ though Lord Dartmouth invited me to dine with him to-day, and Lord
+ Treasurer was to be there. I said I would, if I were out of suspense. Nite
+ deelest MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22. The Queen says warrants shall be drawn, but she will dispose of all in
+ England and Ireland at once, to be teased no more. This will delay it some
+ time; and, while it is delayed, I am not sure of the Queen, my enemies
+ being busy. I hate this suspense. Nite deelest MD.(16)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23. I dined yesterday with General Hamilton.(17) I forgot to tell oo. I
+ write short journals now. I have eggs on the spit. This night the Queen
+ has signed all the warrants, among which Sterne is Bishop of Dromore, and
+ the Duke of Ormond is to send over an order for making me Dean of St.
+ Patrick's. I have no doubt of him at all. I think 'tis now passed. And I
+ suppose MD is malicious enough to be glad, and rather have it than
+ Wells.(18) But you see what a condition I am in. I thought I was to pay
+ but six hundred pounds for the house; but the Bishop of Clogher says eight
+ hundred pounds; first-fruits one hundred and fifty pounds, and so, with
+ patent, a thousand pounds in all; so that I shall not be the better for
+ the deanery these three years. I hope in some time they will be persuaded
+ here to give me some money to pay off these debts. I must finish the book
+ I am writing,(19) before I can go over; and they expect I shall pass next
+ winter here, and then I will dun them to give me a sum of money. However,
+ I hope to pass four or five months with MD, and whatever comes on it. MD's
+ allowance must be increased, and shall be too, fais... (20) I received oor
+ rettle No. 39 to-night; just ten weeks since I had your last. I shall
+ write next post to Bishop Sterne. Never man had so many enemies of
+ Ireland(21) as he. I carried it with the strongest hand possible. If he
+ does not use me well and gently in what dealings I shall have with him, he
+ will be the most ungrateful of mankind. The Archbishop of York,(22) my
+ mortal enemy, has sent, by a third hand, that he would be glad to see me.
+ Shall I see him, or not? I hope to be over in a month, and that MD, with
+ their raillery, will be mistaken, that I shall make it three years. I will
+ answer oo rettle soon; but no more journals. I shall be very busy. Short
+ letters from hence forward. I shall not part with Laracor. That is all I
+ have to live on, except the deanery be worth more than four hundred pounds
+ a year. Is it? If it be, the overplus shall be divided between MD and FW
+ beside usual allowance of MD.... (23) Pray write to me a good-humoured
+ letter immediately, let it be ever so short. This affair was carried with
+ great difficulty, which vexes me. But they say here 'tis much to my
+ reputation that I have made a bishop, in spite of all the world, to get
+ the best deanery in Ireland. Nite dee sollahs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24. I forgot to tell you I had Sterne's letter yesterday, in answer to
+ mine. Oo performed oor commission well, dood dallars both.(24) I made
+ mistakes the three last days, and am forced to alter the number.(25) I
+ dined in the City to-day with my printer, and came home early, and am
+ going to (be) busy with my work. I will send this to-morrow, and I suppose
+ the warrants will go then. I wrote to Dr. Coghill, to take care of passing
+ my patent; and to Parvisol, to attend him with money, if he has any, or to
+ borrow some where he can. Nite MD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25. Morning. I know not whether my warrant be yet ready from the Duke of
+ Ormond. I suppose it will by tonight. I am going abroad, and will keep
+ this unsealed, till I know whether all be finished. Mollow,(26) sollahs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had this letter all day in my pocket, waiting till I heard the warrants
+ were gone over. Mr. Lewis sent to Southwell's clerk at ten; and he said
+ the Bishop of Killaloe(27) had desired they should be stopped till next
+ post. He sent again, that the Bishop of Killaloe's business had nothing to
+ do with ours. Then I went myself, but it was past eleven, and asked the
+ reason. Killaloe is removed to Raphoe, and he has a mind to have an order
+ for the rents of Raphoe, that have fallen due since the vacancy, and he
+ would have all stop till he has gotten that. A pretty request! But the
+ clerk, at Mr. Lewis's message, sent the warrants for Sterne and me; but
+ then it was too late to send this, which frets me heartily, that MD should
+ not have intelligence first from Pdfr. I think to take a hundred pounds a
+ year out of the deanery, and divide it between MD and Pr,(28) and so be
+ one year longer in paying the debt; but we'll talk of zis hen I come over.
+ So nite dear sollahs. Lele.(29)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26. I was at Court to-day, and a thousand people gave me joy; so I ran
+ out. I dined with Lady Orkney. Yesterday I dined with Lord Treasurer and
+ his Saturday people as usual; and was so bedeaned! The Archbishop of York
+ says he will never more speak against me. Pray see that Parvisol stirs
+ about getting my patent. I have given Tooke DD's note to prove she is
+ alive. I'll answer oo rettle.... Nite.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27. Nothing new to-day. I dined with Tom Harley, etc. I'll seal up this
+ to-night. Pray write soon.... MD MD MD FW FW FW ME ME ME Lele, lele.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0067" id="link2H_4_0067">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 64.(1)
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON, May 16 (1713).
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I had yours, No. 40, yesterday. Your new Bishop acts very ungratefully. I
+ cannot say so bad of it as he deserved. I begged at the same post his
+ warrant and mine went over, that he would leave those livings to my
+ disposal. I shall write this post to him to let him know how ill I take
+ it. I have letters to tell me that I ought to think of employing some body
+ to set the tithes of the deanery. I know not what to do at this distance.
+ I cannot be in Ireland under a month. I will write two orders; one to
+ Parvisol, and t'other to Parvisol, and a blank for whatever fellow it is
+ whom the last Dean employed; and I would desire you to advise with friends
+ which to make use of: and if the latter, let the fellow's name be
+ inserted, and both act by commission. If the former, then speak to
+ Parvisol, and know whether he can undertake it. I doubt it is hardly to be
+ done by a perfect stranger alone, as Parvisol is. He may perhaps venture
+ at all, to keep up his interest with me; but that is needless, for I am
+ willing to do him any good, that will do me no harm. Pray advise with
+ Walls and Raymond, and a little with Bishop Sterne for form. Tell Raymond
+ I cannot succeed for him to get that living of Moimed. It is represented
+ here as a great sinecure. Several chaplains have solicited for it; and it
+ has vexed me so, that, if I live, I will make it my business to serve him
+ better in something else. I am heartily sorry for his illness, and that of
+ the other two. If it be not necessary to let the tithes till a month
+ hence, you may keep the two papers, and advise well in the meantime; and
+ whenever it is absolutely necessary, then give that paper which you are
+ most advised to. I thank Mr. Walls for his letter. Tell him that must
+ serve for an answer, with my service to him and her. I shall buy Bishop
+ Sterne's hair as soon as his household goods. I shall be ruined, or at
+ least sadly cramped, unless the Queen will give me a thousand pounds. I am
+ sure she owes me a great deal more. Lord Treasurer rallies me upon it, and
+ I believe intends it; but, quando? I am advised to hasten over as soon as
+ possible, and so I will, and hope to set out the beginning of June. Take
+ no lodging for me. What? at your old tricks again? I can lie somewhere
+ after I land, and I care not where, nor how. I will buy your eggs and
+ bacon, DD... (2) your caps and Bible; and pray think immediately, and give
+ me some commissions, and I will perform them as far as oo poo Pdfr can.(3)
+ The letter I sent before this was to have gone a post before; but an
+ accident hindered it; and, I assure oo, I wam very akkree(4) MD did not
+ write to Dean Pdfr, and I think oo might have had a Dean under your girdle
+ for the superscription. I have just finished my Treatise,(5) and must be
+ ten days correcting it. Farewell, deelest MD, MD, MD, FW, FW, FW, ME, ME,
+ ME, Lele.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You'll seal the two papers after my name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "LONDON, May 16, 1713.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I appoint Mr. Isaiah Parvisol and Mr. to set and let the tithes of the
+ Deanery of St. Patrick's for this present year. In witness whereof, I
+ hereunto set my hand and seal, the day and year above written.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (JONAT. SWIFT."(6))
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "LONDON, May 16, 1713.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do hereby appoint Mr. Isaiah Parvisol my proctor, to set and let the
+ tithes of the Deanery of St. Patrick's. In witness whereof, I have
+ hereunto set my hand and seal, the day and year above written.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ JONAT. SWIFT."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0068" id="link2H_4_0068">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 65.(1)
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ CHESTER, June 6, 1713.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I am come here after six days. I set out on Monday last, and got here
+ to-day about eleven in the morning. A noble rider, fais! and all the ships
+ and people went off yesterday with a rare wind. This was told me, to my
+ comfort, upon my arrival. Having not used riding these three years, made
+ me terrible weary; yet I resolve on Monday to set out for Holyhead, as
+ weary as I am. 'Tis good for my health, mam. When I came here, I found
+ MD's letter of the 26th of May sent down to me. Had you writ a post sooner
+ I might have brought some pins: but you were lazy, and would not write
+ your orders immediately, as I desired you. I will come when God pleases;
+ perhaps I may be with you in a week. I will be three days going to
+ Holyhead; I cannot ride faster, say hat oo will. I am upon Stay-behind's
+ mare. I have the whole inn to myself. I would fain 'scape this Holyhead
+ journey; but I have no prospect of ships, and it will be almost necessary
+ I should be in Dublin before the 25th instant, to take the oaths;(2)
+ otherwise I must wait to a quarter sessions. I will lodge as I can;
+ therefore take no lodgings for me, to pay in my absence. The poor Dean
+ can't afford it. I spoke again to the Duke of Ormond about Moimed for
+ Raymond, and hope he may yet have it, for I laid it strongly to the Duke,
+ and gave him the Bishop of Meath's memorial. I am sorry for Raymond's
+ fistula; tell him so. I will speak to Lord Treasurer about Mrs. South(3)
+ to-morrow. Odso! I forgot; I thought I had been in London. Mrs. Tisdall(4)
+ is very big, ready to lie down. Her husband is a puppy. Do his feet stink
+ still? The letters to Ireland go at so uncertain an hour, that I am forced
+ to conclude. Farewell, MD, MD MD FW FW FW ME ME ME ME.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Lele lele
+ lele logues and
+ Ladies bose fair
+ and slender.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ (On flyleaf.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I mightily approve Ppt's project of hanging the blind parson. When I read
+ that passage upon Chester walls, as I was coming into town, and just
+ received your letter, I said aloud&mdash;Agreeable B-tch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <a name="link2H_NOTE" id="link2H_NOTE">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a> <br /> <a href="#link2H_NOTE"> <b>NOTES.</b> </a><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_NOTE1"> Notes to the Introduction. </a><br />
+ </p>
+ <table summary="" style="margin-right: auto; margin-left: auto">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0071"> LETTER 1. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0072"> LETTER 9. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0073"> LETTER 10. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0074"> LETTER 11. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0075"> LETTER 12. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0076"> LETTER 13. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0077"> LETTER 14. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0078"> LETTER 15. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0079"> LETTER 16. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0080"> LETTER 17. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0081"> LETTER 18. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0082"> LETTER 20. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0083"> LETTER 21. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0084"> LETTER 22. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0085"> LETTER 23. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0086"> LETTER 24. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0087"> LETTER 26. </a>
+ </p>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0088"> LETTER 27. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0089"> LETTER 28. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0090"> LETTER 29. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0091"> LETTER 30. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0092"> LETTER 31. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0093"> LETTER 32. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0094"> LETTER 33. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0095"> LETTER 34. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0096"> LETTER 35. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0097"> LETTER 36. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0098"> LETTER 37. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0099"> LETTER 38. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0100"> LETTER 39. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0101"> LETTER 41. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0102"> LETTER 42. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0103"> LETTER 43. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0104"> LETTER 44. </a>
+ </p>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0105"> LETTER 46. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0106"> LETTER 47. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0107"> LETTER 48. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0108"> LETTER 49. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0109"> LETTER 50. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0110"> LETTER 51. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0111"> LETTER 52. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0112"> LETTER 53. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0113"> LETTER 54. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0114"> LETTER 55. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0115"> LETTER 56. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0116"> LETTER 57. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0117"> LETTER 58. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0118"> LETTER 59. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0119"> LETTER 61. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0120"> LETTER 62. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0121"> LETTER 63. </a>
+ </p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ NOTES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ These notes are referenced by 'Notes to the Introduction' or 'Letter
+ (number)', and the numbers in square brackets (thus &mdash; (3)) in the
+ body of the Journal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_NOTE1" id="link2H_NOTE1">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Notes to the Introduction.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ 1 Notes and Queries, Sixth Series, x. 287.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ 2 See letter from Swift to John Temple, February 1737. She was then "quite
+ sunk with years and unwieldliness."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 Athenaeum, Aug. 8, 1891.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 Journal, May 4, 1711.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 Craik's Life of Swift, 269.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 Unpublished Letters of Dean Swift, pp. 189-96.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 In 1730 he wrote, "Those who have been married may form juster ideas of
+ that estate than I can pretend to do" (Dr. Birkbeck Hill's Unpublished
+ Letters of Dean Swift, p. 237).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 Scott added a new incident which has become incorporated in the popular
+ conception of Swift's story. Delany is said to have met Swift rushing out
+ of Archbishop King's study, with a countenance of distraction, immediately
+ after the wedding. King, who was in tears, said, "You have just met the
+ most unhappy man on earth; but on the subject of his wretchedness you must
+ never ask a question." Will it be believed that Scott&mdash;who rejects
+ Delany's inference from this alleged incident&mdash;had no better
+ authority for it than "a friend of his (Delany's) relict"?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 This incident, for which there is probably some foundation of fact&mdash;we
+ cannot say how much&mdash;has been greatly expanded by Mrs. Woods in her
+ novel Esther Vanhomrigh. Unfortunately most of her readers cannot, of
+ course, judge exactly how far her story is a work of imagination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 In October Swift explained that he had been in the country "partly to
+ see a lady of my old acquaintance, who was extremely ill" (Unpublished
+ Letters of Dean Swift, p. 198).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 There is a story that shortly before her death Swift begged Stella to
+ allow herself to be publicly announced as his wife, but that she replied
+ that it was then too late. The versions given by Delany and Theophilus
+ Swift differ considerably, while Sheridan alters the whole thing by
+ representing Swift as brutally refusing to comply with Stella's last
+ wishes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 There has also been the absurd suggestion that the impediment was
+ Swift's knowledge that both he and Stella were the illegitimate children
+ of Sir William Temple&mdash;a theory which is absolutely disproved by
+ known facts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 It is curious to note the intimate knowledge of some of Swift's
+ peculiarities which was possessed by the hostile writer of a pamphlet
+ called A Hue and Cry after Dr. S&mdash;-t, published in 1714. That piece
+ consists, for the most part, of extracts from a supposed Diary by Swift,
+ and contains such passages as these: "Friday. Go to the Club... Am
+ treated. Expenses one shilling." "Saturday. Bid my servant get all things
+ ready for a journey to the country: mend my breeches; hire a washerwoman,
+ making her allow for old shirts, socks, dabbs and markees, which she
+ bought of me... Six coaches of quality, and nine hacks, this day called at
+ my lodgings." "Thursday. The Earl looked queerly: left him in a huff. Bid
+ him send for me when he was fit for company... Spent ten shillings."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 The "little language" is marked chiefly by such changes of letters
+ (e.g., l for r, or r for l) as a child makes when learning to speak. The
+ combinations of letters in which Swift indulges are not so easy of
+ interpretation. For himself he uses Pdfr, and sometimes Podefar or FR
+ (perhaps Poor dear foolish rogue). Stella is Ppt (Poor pretty thing). MD
+ (my dears) usually stands for both Stella and Mrs. Dingley, but sometimes
+ for Stella alone. Mrs. Dingley is indicated by ME (Madam Elderly), D, or
+ DD (Dear Dingley). The letters FW may mean Farewell, or Foolish Wenches.
+ Lele seems sometimes to be There, there, and sometimes Truly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0071" id="link2H_4_0071">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 1.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ 1. Addressed "To Mrs. Dingley, at Mr. Curry's house over against the Ram
+ in Capel Street, Dublin, Ireland," and endorsed by Esther Johnson, "Sept.
+ 9. Received." Afterwards Swift added, "MD received this Sept. 9," and
+ "Letters to Ireland from Sept.1710, begun soon after the change of
+ Ministry. Nothing in this."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. Beaumont is the "grey old fellow, poet Joe," of Swift's verses "On the
+ little house by the Churchyard at Castlenock." Joseph Beaumont, a
+ linen-merchant, is described as "a venerable, handsome, grey-headed man,
+ of quick and various natural abilities, but not improved by learning." His
+ inventions and mathematical speculations, relating to the longitude and
+ other things, brought on mental troubles, which were intensified by
+ bankruptcy, about 1718. He was afterwards removed from Dublin to his home
+ at Trim, where he rallied; but in a few years his madness returned, and he
+ committed suicide.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. Vicar of Trim, and formerly a Fellow of Trinity College, Dublin. In
+ various places in his correspondence Swift criticises the failings of Dr.
+ Anthony Raymond, who was, says Scott, "a particular friend." His
+ unreliability in money matters, the improvidence of his large family, his
+ peculiarities in grammar, his pride in his good manners, all these points
+ are noticed in the journal and elsewhere. But when Dr. Raymond returned to
+ Ireland after a visit to London, Swift felt a little melancholy, and
+ regretted that he had not seen more of him. In July 1713 Raymond was
+ presented to the Crown living of Moyenet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. A small township on the estuary of the Dee, between twelve and thirteen
+ miles north-west of Chester. In the early part of the eighteenth century
+ Parkgate was a rival of Holyhead as a station for the Dublin packets,
+ which started, on the Irish side, from off Kingsend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. Dr. St. George Ashe, afterwards Bishop of Derry, who had been Swift's
+ tutor at Trinity College, Dublin. He died in 1718. It is this lifelong
+ friend who is said to have married Swift and Esther Johnson in 1716.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. The Commission to solicit for the remission of the First-Fruits and
+ twentieth parts, payable to the Crown by the Irish clergy, was signed by
+ the Archbishops of Armagh, Dublin, and Cashel, and the Bishops of Kildare,
+ Meath, and Killala.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. Dr. William Lloyd was appointed Bishop of Killala in 1690. He had
+ previously been Dean of Achonry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. Dr. John Hough (1651-1743). In 1687 he had been elected President of
+ Magdalen College, Oxford, in place of the nominee of James II. Hough was
+ Bishop of Oxford, Lichfield, and Worcester successively, and declined the
+ primacy in 1715.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. Steele was at this time Gazetteer. The Cockpit, in Whitehall, looked
+ upon St. James's Palace, and was used for various Government purposes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. This coffee-house, the resort of the Whig politicians, was kept by a
+ man named Elliot. It is often alluded to in the Tatler and Spectator.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. William Stewart, second Viscount Mountjoy, a friend and correspondent
+ of Swift's in Ireland. He was the son of one of William's generals, and
+ was himself a Lieutenant-General and Master-General of the Ordnance; he
+ died in 1728.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. Catherine, daughter of Maurice Keating, of Narraghmore, Kildare, and
+ wife of Garret Wesley, of Dangan, M.P. for Meath. She died in 1745. On the
+ death of Garret Wesley without issue in 1728, the property passed to a
+ cousin, Richard Colley, who was afterwards created Baron Mornington, and
+ was grandfather to the Duke of Wellington.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. The landlady of Esther Johnson and Mrs. Dingley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. Swift's housekeeper at Laracor. Elsewhere Swift speaks of his "old
+ Presbyterian housekeeper," "who has been my Walpole above thirty years,
+ whenever I lived in this kingdom." "Joe Beaumont is my oracle for public
+ affairs in the country, and an old Presbyterian woman in town."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. Isaiah Parvisol, Swift's tithe-agent and steward at Laracor, was an
+ Irishman of French extraction, who died in 1718 (Birkbeck's Unpublished
+ Letters of Dean Swift, 1899, p.85).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Letter 2.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. In some MS. Accounts of Swift's, in the Forster Collection at South
+ Kensington there is the following entry:&mdash;"Set out for England Aug.
+ 31st on Thursday, 10 at night; landed at Parkgate Friday 1st at noon.
+ Sept. 1, 1710, came to London. Thursday at noon, Sept. 7th, with Lord
+ Mountjoy, etc. Mem.: Lord Mountjoy bore my expenses from Chester to
+ London."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. In a letter to Archbishop King of the same date Swift says he was
+ "equally caressed by both parties; by one as a sort of bough for drowning
+ men to lay hold of, and by the other as one discontented with the late men
+ in power."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. The Earl of Godolphin, who was severely satirised by Swift in his Sid
+ Hamet's Rod, 1710. He had been ordered to break his staff as Treasurer on
+ August 8. Swift told Archbishop King that Godolphin was "altogether short,
+ dry, and morose."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. Martha, widow of Sir Thomas Giffard, Bart., of County Kildare, the
+ favourite sister of Sir William Temple, had been described by Swift in
+ early pindaric verses as "wise and great." Afterwards he was to call her
+ "an old beast" (Journal, Nov. 11, 1710). Their quarrel arose, towards the
+ close of 1709, out of a difference with regard to the publication of Sir
+ William Temple's Works. On the appearance of vol. v. Lady Giffard charged
+ Swift with publishing portions of the writings from an unfaithful copy in
+ lieu of the originals in his possession, and in particular with printing
+ laudatory notices of Godolphin and Sunderland which Temple intended to
+ omit, and with omitting an unfavourable remark on Sunderland which Temple
+ intended to print. Swift replied that the corrections were all made by
+ Temple himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. Lord Wharton's second wife, Lucy, daughter of Lord Lisburn. She died in
+ 1716, a few months after her husband. See Lady M. W. Montagu's Letters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. Mrs. Bridget Johnson, who married, as her second husband, Ralph Mose or
+ Moss, of Farnham, an agent for Sir William Temple's estate, was
+ waiting-woman or companion to Lady Giffard. In her will (1722) Lady
+ Giffard left Mrs. Moss 20 pounds, "with my silver cup and cover." Mrs.
+ Moss died in 1745, when letters of administration were granted to a
+ creditor of the deceased.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. Dr. William King (1610-1729), a Whig and High Churchman, had more than
+ one difference with Swift during the twenty years following Swift's first
+ visit to London in connection with the First-Fruits question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. Swift's benefice, in the diocese of Meath, two miles from Trim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. Steele, who had been issuing the Tatler thrice weekly since April. He
+ lost the Gazetteership in October.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. James, second Duke of Ormond (1665-1745) was appointed Lord Lieutenant
+ on the 26th of October. In the following year he became Captain-General
+ and Commander-in-Chief. He was impeached of high treason and attainted in
+ 1715; and he died in exile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. "Presto," substituted by the original editor for "Pdfr," was suggested
+ by a passage in the Journal for Aug. 2, 1711, where Swift says that the
+ Duchess of Shrewsbury "could not say my name in English, but said Dr.
+ Presto, which is Italian for Swift."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. Charles Jervas, the popular portrait-painter, has left two portraits
+ of Swift, one of which is in the National Portrait Gallery, and the other
+ in the Bodleian Library.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. Sir William Temple's nephew, and son of Sir John Temple (died 1704),
+ Solicitor and Attorney-General, and Speaker of the Irish House of Commons.
+ "Jack" Temple acquired the estate of Moor Park, Surrey, by his marriage
+ with Elizabeth, granddaughter of Sir William Temple, and elder daughter of
+ John Temple, who committed suicide in 1689. As late as 1706 Swift received
+ an invitation to visit Moor Park.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. Dr. Benjamin Pratt, Provost of Trinity College, Dublin, was appointed
+ Dean of Down in 1717. Swift calls him "a person of wit and learning," and
+ "a gentleman of good birth and fortune,... very much esteemed among us"
+ (Short Character of Thomas, Earl of Wharton). On his death in 1721 Swift
+ wrote, "He was one of the oldest acquaintance I had, and the last that I
+ expected to die. He has left a young widow, in very good circumstances. He
+ had schemes of long life.... What a ridiculous thing is man!" (Unpublished
+ Letters of Dean Swift, 1899, p. 106).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. A Westmeath landlord, whom Swift met from time to time in London. The
+ Leighs were well acquainted with Esther Johnson.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. Dr. Enoch Sterne, appointed Dean of St. Patrick's, Dublin, in 1704.
+ Swift was his successor in the deanery on Dr. Sterne's appointment as
+ Bishop of Dromore in 1713. In 1717 Sterne was translated to the bishopric
+ of Clogher. He spent much money on the cathedrals, etc., with which he was
+ connected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. Archdeacon Walls was rector of Castle Knock, near Trim. Esther Johnson
+ was a frequent visitor at his house in Queen Street, Dublin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. William Frankland, Comptroller of the Inland Office at the Post
+ Office, was the second son of the Postmaster-General, Sir Thomas
+ Frankland, Bart. Luttrell (vi. 333) records that in 1708 he was made
+ Treasurer of the Stamp Office, or, according to Chamberlayne's Mag. Brit.
+ Notitia for 1710, Receiver-General.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. Thomas Wharton, Earl and afterwards Marquis of Wharton, had been one
+ of Swift's fellow-travellers from Dublin. Lord Lieutenant of Ireland under
+ the Whig Government, from 1708 to 1710, Wharton was the most
+ thorough-going party man that had yet appeared in English politics; and
+ his political enemies did not fail to make the most of his well-known
+ immorality. In his Notes to Macky's Characters Swift described Wharton as
+ "the most universal villain that ever I knew." On his death in 1715 he was
+ succeeded by his profligate son, Philip, who was created Duke of Wharton
+ in 1718.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. This money was a premium the Government had promised Beaumont for his
+ Mathematical Sleying Tables, calculated for the improvement of the linen
+ manufacture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21. The bellman was both town-crier and night-watchman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Letter 3.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. Dr. William Cockburn (1669-1739), Swift's physician, of a good Scottish
+ family, was educated at Leyden. He invented an electuary for the cure of
+ fluxes, and in 1730, in The Danger of Improving Physick, satirised the
+ academical physicians who envied him the fortune he had made by his secret
+ remedy. He was described in 1729 as "an old very rich quack."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. Sir Matthew Dudley, Bart., an old Whig friend, was M.P. for
+ Huntingdonshire, and Commissioner of the Customs from 1706 to 1712, and
+ again under George I., until his death in 1721.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. Isaac Manley, who was appointed Postmaster-General in Ireland in 1703
+ (Luttrell, v. 333). He had previously been Comptroller of the English
+ Letter Office, a post in which he was succeeded by William Frankland, son
+ of Sir Thomas Frankland. Dunton calls Manley "loyal and acute."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. Sir Thomas Frankland was joint Postmaster-General from 1691 to 1715. He
+ succeeded to the baronetcy on the death of his father, Sir William
+ Frankland, in 1697, and he died in 1726. Macky describes Sir Thomas as "of
+ a sweet and easy disposition, zealous for the Constitution, yet not
+ forward, and indulgent to his dependants." On this Swift comments, "This
+ is a fair character."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. Theophilus Butler, elected M.P. for Cavan, in the Irish Parliament, in
+ 1703, and for Belturbet (as "the Right Hon. Theophilus Butler") in 1713.
+ On May 3, 1710, Luttrell wrote (Brief Relation of State Affairs, vi. 577),
+ "'Tis said the Earl of Montrath, Lord Viscount Mountjoy... and Mr. Butler
+ will be made Privy Councillors of the Kingdom of Ireland." Butler&mdash;a
+ contemporary of Swift's at Trinity College, Dublin&mdash;was created Baron
+ of Newtown-Butler in 1715, and his brother, who succeeded him in 1723, was
+ made Viscount Lanesborough. Butler's wife was Emilia, eldest daughter and
+ co-heir of James Stopford, of Tara, County Meath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. No. 193 of the Tatler, for July 4, 1710, contained a letter from Downes
+ the Prompter&mdash;not by Steele himself&mdash;in ridicule of Harley and
+ his proposed Ministry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. Charles Robartes, second Earl of Radnor, who died in 1723. In the
+ Journal for Dec. 30, 1711, Swift calls him "a scoundrel."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. Benjamin Tooke, Swift's bookseller or publisher, lived at the Middle
+ Temple Gate. Dunton wrote of him, "He is truly honest, a man of refined
+ sense, and is unblemished in his reputation." Tooke died in 1723.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. Swift's servant, of whose misdeeds he makes frequent complaints in the
+ Journal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. Deputy Vice-Treasurer of Ireland. In one place Swift calls him Captain
+ Pratt; and in all probability he is the John Pratt who, as we learn from
+ Dalton's English Army Lists, was appointed captain in General Erle's
+ regiment of foot in 1699, and was out of the regiment by 1706. In 1702 he
+ obtained the Queen's leave to be absent from the regiment when it was sent
+ to the West Indies. Pratt seems to have been introduced to Swift by
+ Addison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. Charles Ford, of Wood Park, near Dublin, was a great lover of the
+ opera and a friend of the Tory wits. He was appointed Gazetteer in 1712.
+ Gay calls him "joyous Ford," and he was given to over-indulgence in
+ conviviality. See Swift's poem on Stella at Wood Park.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. Lord Somers, to whom Swift had dedicated The Tale of a Tub, with high
+ praise of his public and private virtues. In later years Swift said that
+ Somers "possessed all excellent qualifications except virtue."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. At the foundation school of the Ormonds at Kilkenny. (see note 22.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. A Whig haberdasher.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. Benjamin Hoadley, the Whig divine, had been engaged in controversy
+ with Sacheverell, Blackall, and Atterbury. After the accession of George
+ I. he became Bishop of Bangor, Hereford, Salisbury, and Winchester in
+ success.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. Dr. Henry Sacheverell, whose impeachment and trial had led to the fall
+ of the Whig Government.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. Sir Berkeley Lucy, Bart., F.R.S., married Katherine, daughter of
+ Charles Cotton, of Beresford, Staffordshire, Isaac Walton's friend. Lady
+ Lucy died in 1740, leaving an only surviving daughter, Mary, who married
+ the youngest son of the Earl of Northampton, and had two sons, who became
+ successively seventh and eighth Earls of Northampton. Forster and others
+ assumed that "Lady Lucy" was a Lady Lucy Stanhope, though they were not
+ able to identify her. It was reserved for Mr. Ryland to clear up this
+ difficulty. As he points out, Lady Lucy's elder sister, Olive, married
+ George Stanhope, Dean of Canterbury, and left a daughter Mary,&mdash;Swift's
+ "Moll Stanhope,"&mdash;a beauty and a madcap, who married, in 1712,
+ William Burnet, son of Bishop Burnet, and died in 1714. Mary, another
+ sister of Lady Lucy's, married Augustine Armstrong, of Great Ormond
+ Street, and is the Mrs. Armstrong mentioned by Swift on Feb. 3, 1711, as a
+ pretender to wit, without taste. Sir Berkeley Lucy's mother was a daughter
+ of the first Earl of Berkeley, and it was probably through the Berkeleys
+ that Swift came to know the Lucys.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. Ann Long was sister to Sir James Long, and niece to Colonel
+ Strangeways. Once a beauty and toast of the Kit-Cat Club, she fell into
+ narrow circumstances through imprudence and the unkindness of her friends,
+ and retired under the name of Mrs. Smythe to Lynn, in Norfolk, where she
+ died in 1711 (see Journal, December 25, 1711). Swift said, "She was the
+ most beautiful person of the age she lived in; of great honour and virtue,
+ infinite sweetness and generosity of temper, and true good sense"
+ (Forster's Swift, 229). In a letter of December 1711, Swift wrote that she
+ "had every valuable quality of body and mind that could make a lady loved
+ and esteemed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. Said, I know not on what authority, to be Swift's friend, Mrs. Barton.
+ But Mrs. Barton is often mentioned by Swift as living in London in
+ 1710-11.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. One of Swift's cousins, who was separated from her husband, a man of
+ bad character, living abroad. Her second husband, Lancelot, a servant of
+ Lord Sussex, lived in New Bond Street, and there Swift lodged in 1727.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21. 100,000 pounds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22. Francis Stratford's name appears in the Dublin University Register for
+ 1686 immediately before Swift's. Budgell is believed to have referred to
+ the friendship of Swift and Stratford in the Spectator, No. 353, where he
+ describes two schoolfellows, and says that the man of genius was buried in
+ a country parsonage of 160 pounds a year, while his friend, with the bare
+ abilities of a common scrivener, had gained an estate of above 100,000
+ pounds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23. William Cowper, afterwards Lord Cowper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24. Sir Simon Harcourt, afterwards Viscount Harcourt, had been counsel for
+ Sacheverell. On Sept. 19, 1710, he was appointed Attorney-General, and on
+ October 19 Lord Keeper of the Great Seal. In April 1713 he became Lord
+ Chancellor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25. This may be some relative of Dr. John Freind (see Letter 9), or, more
+ probably, as Sir Henry Craik suggests, a misprint for Colonel Frowde,
+ Addison's friend (see Journal, Nov. 4, 1710). No officer named Freind or
+ Friend is mentioned in Dalton's English Army Lists.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26. See the Tatler, Nos. 124, 203. There are various allusions in the
+ "Wentworth Papers" to this, the first State Lottery of 1710; and two
+ bluecoat boys drawing out the tickets, and showing their hands to the
+ crowd, as Swift describes them, are shown in a reproduction of a picture
+ in a contemporary pamphlet given in Ashton's Social Life in the Reign of
+ Queen Anne, i. 115.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27. A few weeks later Swift wrote, "I took a fancy of resolving to grow
+ mad for it, but now it is off."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28. Sir John Holland, Bart., was a leading manager for the Commons in the
+ impeachment of Sacheverell. He succeeded Sir Thomas Felton in the
+ Comptrollership in March 1710.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29. Dryden Leach. (see Letter 7.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30. William Pate, "bel esprit and woollen-draper," as Swift called him,
+ lived opposite the Royal Exchange. He was Sheriff of London in 1734, and
+ died in 1746. Arbuthnot, previous to matriculating at Oxford, lodged with
+ Pate, who gave him a letter of introduction to Dr. Charlett, Master of
+ University College; and Pate is supposed to have been the woollen-draper,
+ "remarkable for his learning and good-nature," who is mentioned by Steele
+ in the Guardian, No. 141.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 31. James Brydges, son of Lord Chandos of Sudeley, was appointed
+ Paymaster-General of Forces Abroad in 1707. He succeeded his father as
+ Baron Chandos in 1714, and was created Duke of Chandos in 1729. The
+ "princely Chandos" and his house at Canons suggested to Pope the Timon's
+ villa of the "Epistle to Lord Burlington." The Duke died in 1744.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 32. Charles Talbot, created Duke of Shrewsbury in 1694, was held in great
+ esteem by William III., and was Lord Chamberlain under Anne. In 1713 he
+ became Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, and held various offices under George
+ I., until his death in 1718. "Before he was o. age," says Macaulay, "he
+ was allowed to be one of the finest gentlemen and finest scholars of his
+ time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 33. See No. 230.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 34. William Cavendish, second Duke of Devonshire (1673-1729), who was Lord
+ Steward from 1707 to 1710 and from 1714 to 1716. Afterwards he was Lord
+ President of the Council. Swift's comment on Macky's character of this
+ Whig nobleman was, "A very poor understanding."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 35. John Annesley, fourth Earl of Anglesea, a young nobleman of great
+ promise, had only recently been appointed joint Vice-Treasurer,
+ Receiver-General, and Paymaster of the Forces in Ireland, and sworn of the
+ Privy Council.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 36. Nichols, followed by subsequent editors, suggested that "Durham" was a
+ mistake for "St. David's," because Dr. George Bull, Bishop of St. David's,
+ died in 1710. But Dr. Bull died on Feb. 17, 1710, though his successor,
+ Dr. Philip Bisse, was not appointed until November; and Swift was merely
+ repeating a false report of the death of Lord Crewe, Bishop of Durham,
+ which was current on the day on which he wrote. Luttrell says, on Sept.
+ 19, "The Lord Crewe.. . died lately"; but on the 23rd he adds, "The Bishop
+ of Durham is not dead as reported" (Brief Relation, vi. 630, 633.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 37. Lady Elizabeth ("Betty") Butler, who died unmarried in 1750.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 38. Swift wrote in 1734, "Once every year I issued out an edict,
+ commanding that all ladies of wit, sense, merit, and quality, who had an
+ ambition to be acquainted with me, should make the first advances at their
+ peril: which edict, you may believe, was universally obeyed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 39. Charles, second Earl of Berkeley (1649-1710), married Elizabeth,
+ daughter of Baptist Noel, Viscount Campden. The Earl died on Sept. 24,
+ 1710, and his widow in 1719. Swift, it will be remembered, had been
+ chaplain to Lord Berkeley in Ireland in 1699.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 40. Lady Betty and Lady Mary Butler. (see Letter 7, notes 2 and 3.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 41. Henry Boyle, Chancellor of the Exchequer from 1702 to 1708, was
+ Secretary of State from 1708 to 1710, when he was succeeded by St. John.
+ In 1714 he was created Baron Carleton, and he was Lord President from 1721
+ until his death in 1725.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 42. On Sept. 29 Swift wrote that his rooms consisted of the first floor, a
+ dining-room and bed-chamber, at eight shillings a week. On his last visit
+ to England, in 1726, he lodged "next door to the Royal Chair" in Bury
+ Street. Steele lived in the same street from 1707 to 1712; and Mrs.
+ Vanhomrigh was Swift's next-door neighbour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 43. In Exchange Alley. Cf. Spectator, No. 454: "I went afterwards to
+ Robin's, and saw people who had dined with me at the fivepenny ordinary
+ just before, give bills for the value of large estates."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Letter 4.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1 John Molesworth, Commissioner of the Stamp Office, was sent as Envoy to
+ Tuscany in 1710, and was afterwards Minister at Florence, Venice, Geneva,
+ and Turin. He became second Viscount Molesworth in 1725, and died in 1731.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2 Misson says, "Every two hours you may write to any part of the city or
+ suburbs: he that receives it pays a penny, and you give nothing when you
+ put it into the Post; but when you write into the country both he that
+ writes and he that receives pay each a penny." The Penny Post system had
+ been taken over by the Government, but was worked separately from the
+ general Post.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 The Countess of Berkeley's second daughter, who married, in 1706, Sir
+ John Germaine, Bart. (1650-1718), a soldier of fortune. Lady Betty
+ Germaine is said to have written a satire on Pope (Nichols' Literary
+ Anecdotes, ii. 11), and was a constant correspondent of Swift's. She was
+ always a Whig, and shortly before her death in 1769 she made a present of
+ 100 pounds to John Wilkes, then in prison in the Tower. Writing of Lady
+ Betty Butler and Lady Betty Germaine, Swift says elsewhere, "I saw two
+ Lady Bettys this afternoon; the beauty of one, the good breeding and
+ nature of the other, and the wit of either, would have made a fine woman."
+ Germaine obtained the estate at Drayton through his first wife, Lady Mary
+ Mordaunt&mdash;Lord Peterborough's sister&mdash;who had been divorced by
+ her first husband, the Duke of Norfolk. Lady Betty was thirty years
+ younger than her husband, and after Sir John's death she remained a widow
+ for over fifty years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 The letter in No. 280 of the Tatler.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 Discover, find out. Cf. Shakespeare's All's Well that Ends Well, iii. 6:
+ "He was first smoked by the old Lord Lafeu."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 A village near Dublin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 Excellent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 John Molesworth, and, probably, his brother Richard, afterwards third
+ Viscount Molesworth, who had saved the Duke of Marlborough's life at the
+ battle of Ramillies, and had been appointed, in 1710, colonel of a
+ regiment of foot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 Presumably at Charles Ford's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 The Virtues of Sid Hamet the Magician's Rod, published as a single
+ folio sheet, was a satire on Godolphin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 Apparently Marcus Antonius Morgan, steward to the Bishop of Kildare
+ (Craik). Swift wrote to the Duke of Montagu on Aug. 12, 1713 (Buccleuch
+ MSS., 1899, i. 359). "Mr. Morgan of Kingstrope is a friend, and was, I am
+ informed, put out of the Commission of justice for being so."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 Dr. Raymond is called Morgan's "father" because he warmly supported
+ Morgan's interests.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 The Rev. Thomas Warburton, Swift's curate at Laracor, whom Swift
+ described to the Archbishop as "a gentleman of very good learning and
+ sense, who has behaved himself altogether unblamably."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 The tobacco was to be used as snuff. About this time ladies much
+ affected the use of snuff, and Steele, in No. 344 of the Spectator, speaks
+ of Flavilla pulling out her box, "which is indeed full of good Brazil," in
+ the middle of the sermon. People often made their own snuff out of roll
+ tobacco, by means of rasps. On Nov. 3, 1711, Swift speaks of sending "a
+ fine snuff rasp of ivory, given me by Mrs. St. John for Dingley, and a
+ large roll of tobacco."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 Katherine Barton, second daughter of Robert Barton, of Brigstock,
+ Northamptonshire, and niece of Sir Isaac Newton. She was a favourite among
+ the toasts of the Kit-Cat Club, and Lord Halifax, who left her a fortune,
+ was an intimate friend. In 1717 she married John Conduitt, afterwards
+ Master of the Mint.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 William Connolly, appointed a Commissioner of the Revenue in 1709, was
+ afterwards Speaker of the Irish House of Commons. He died in 1729. Francis
+ Robarts, appointed a Commissioner of the Revenue in 1692, was made a
+ Teller of the Exchequer in England in 1704, and quitted that office, in
+ September 1710, on his reappointment, in Connolly's place, as Revenue
+ Commissioner in Ireland. In 1714 Robarts was removed, and Connolly again
+ appointed Commissioner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 Enoch Sterne, Collector of Wicklow and Clerk to the Irish House of
+ Lords. Writing to Dr. Sterne on Sept. 26, Swift said, "I saw Collector
+ Sterne, who desired me to present his service to you, and to tell you he
+ would be glad to hear from you, but not about business."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 In his "Character of Mrs. Johnson" Swift says, "She was never known to
+ cry out, or discover any fear, in a coach." The passage in the text is
+ obscure. Apparently Esther Johnson had boasted of saving money by walking,
+ instead of riding, like a coward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 John Radcliffe (1650-1714), the well-known physician and wit, was often
+ denounced as a clever empiric. Early in 1711 he treated Swift for his
+ dizziness. By his will, Radcliffe left most of his property to the
+ University of Oxford.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20 Charles Barnard, Sergeant-Surgeon to the Queen, and Master of the
+ Barber Surgeons' Company. His large and valuable library, to which Swift
+ afterwards refers, fetched great prices. Luttrell records Barnard's death
+ in his diary for Oct. 12, 1710.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21 Robert Harley, afterwards Earl of Oxford, had been appointed Chancellor
+ of the Exchequer in August 1710. In May 1711 he was raised to the peerage
+ and made Lord High Treasurer; and he is constantly referred to in the
+ Journal as "Lord Treasurer." He was impeached in 1715, but was acquitted
+ to 1717; he died in 1724.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22 The Right Hon. Thomas Bligh, M.P., of Rathmore, County Meath, died on
+ Aug. 28, 1710. His son, mentioned later in the Journal, became Earl of
+ Darnley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Letter 5.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1 Penalty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2 Erasmus Lewis, Under Secretary of State under Lord Dartmouth, was a
+ great friend of Swift, Pope, and Arbuthnot. He had previously been one of
+ Harley's secretaries, and in his Horace Imitated, Book I. Ep. vii., Swift
+ describes him as "a cunning shaver, and very much in Harley's favour."
+ Arbuthnot says that under George I. Lewis kept company with the greatest,
+ and was "principal governor" in many families. Lewis was a witness to
+ Arbuthnot's will. Pope and Esther Vanhomrigh both left him money to buy
+ rings. Lewis died in 1754, aged eighty-three.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 Charles Darteneuf, or Dartiquenave, was a celebrated epicure, who is
+ said to have been a son of Charles II. Lord Lyttleton, in his Dialogues of
+ the Dead, recalling Pope's allusions to him, selects him to represent
+ modern bon vivants in the dialogue between Darteneuf and Apicius. See
+ Tatler 252. Darteneuf was Paymaster of the Royal Works and a member of the
+ Kit-Cat Club. He died in 1737.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 No. 230.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 Good, excellent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 Captain George Delaval, appointed Envoy Extraordinary to the King of
+ Portugal in Oct, 1710, was with Lord Peterborough in Spain in 1706. In May
+ 1707 he went to Lisbon with despatches for the Courts of Spain and
+ Portugal, from whence he was to proceed as Envoy to the Emperor of
+ Morocco, with rich presents (Luttrell, vi. 52, 174, 192).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 Charles Montagu, Earl of Halifax, as Ranger of Bushey Park and Hampton
+ Court, held many offices under William III., and was First Lord of the
+ Treasury under George I., until his death in 1715. He was great as
+ financier and as debater, and he was a liberal patron of literature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 John Manley, M.P. for Bossiney, was made Surveyor-General on Sept. 30,
+ 1710, and died in 1714. In 1706 he fought a duel with another Cornish
+ member (Luttrell, vi. 11, 535, 635). He seems to be the cousin whom Mrs.
+ De la Riviere Manley accuses of having drawn her into a false marriage.
+ For Isaac Manley and Sir Thomas Frankland, see Letter 3, notes 3 and 4.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 The Earl of Godolphin (see Letter 2, note 3).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 Sir John Stanley, Bart., of Northend, Commissioner of Customs, whom
+ Swift knew through his intimate friends the Pendarves. His wife, Anne,
+ daughter of Bernard Granville, and niece of John, Earl of Bath, was aunt
+ to Mary Granville, afterwards Mrs. Delany, who lived with the Stanleys at
+ their house in Whitehall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 Henry, Viscount Hyde, eldest son of Laurence Hyde, Earl of Rochester,
+ succeeded his father in the earldom in 1711, and afterwards became Earl of
+ Clarendon. His wife, Jane, younger daughter of Sir William Leveson Gower,&mdash;who
+ married a daughter of John Granville, Earl of Bath,&mdash;was a beauty,
+ and the mother of two beauties&mdash;Jane, afterwards Countess of Essex
+ (see journal, Jan. 29, 1712), and Catherine, afterwards Countess of
+ Queensberry. Lady Hyde was complimented by Prior, Pope, and her kinsman,
+ Lord Lansdowne, and is said to have been more handsome than either of her
+ daughters. She died in 1725; her husband in 1753. Lord Hyde became joint
+ Vice-Treasurer for Ireland in 1710; hence his interest with respect to
+ Pratt's appointment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 See Letter 3, note 10.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 Sir Paul Methuen (1672-1757), son of John Methuen, diplomatist and Lord
+ Chancellor of Ireland. Methuen was Envoy and Ambassador to Portugal from
+ 1697 to 1708, and was M.P. for Devizes from 1708 to 1710, and a Lord of
+ the Admiralty. Under George I. he was Ambassador to Spain, and held other
+ offices. Gay speaks of "Methuen of sincerest mind, as Arthur grave, as
+ soft as womankind," and Steele dedicated to him the seventh volume of the
+ Spectator. In his Notes on Macky's Characters, Swift calls him "a
+ profligate rogue... without abilities of any kind."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 Sir James Montagu was Attorney-General from 1708 to Sept. 1710, when he
+ resigned, and was succeeded by Sir Simon Harcourt. Under George I. Montagu
+ was raised to the Bench, and a few months before his death in 1723 became
+ Chief Baron of the Exchequer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 The turnpike system had spread rapidly since the Restoration, and had
+ already effected an important reform in the English roads. Turnpike roads
+ were as yet unknown in Ireland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 Ann Johnson, who afterwards married a baker named Filby.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 An infusion of which the main ingredient was cowslip or palsy-wort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 William Legge, first Earl of Dartmouth (1672-1750), was St. John's
+ fellow Secretary of State. Lord Dartmouth seems to have been a plain,
+ unpretending man, whose ignorance of French helped to throw important
+ matters into St. John's hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 Richard Dyot was tried at the Old Bailey, on Jan. 13, 1710-11, for
+ counterfeiting stamps, and was acquitted, the crime being found not
+ felony, but only breach of trust. Two days afterwards a bill of indictment
+ was found against him for high misdemeanour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20 Sir Philip Meadows (1626-1718) was knighted in 1658, and was Ambassador
+ to Sweden under Cromwell. His son Philip (died 1757) was knighted in 1700,
+ and was sent on a special mission to the Emperor in 1707. A great-grandson
+ of the elder Sir Philip was created Earl Manvers in 1806.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21 Her eyes were weak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22 The son of the Sir Robert Southwell to whom Temple had offered Swift as
+ a "servant" on his going as Secretary of State to Ireland in 1690. Edward
+ Southwell (1671-1730) succeeded his father as Secretary of State for
+ Ireland in 1702, and in 1708 was appointed Clerk to the Privy Council of
+ Great Britain. Southwell held various offices under George I. and George
+ II., and amassed a considerable fortune.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23 Nicholas Rowe (1674-1718), dramatist and poet laureate, and one of the
+ first editors of Shakespeare, was at this time under-secretary to the Duke
+ of Queensberry, Secretary of State for Scotland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24 No. 238 contains Swift's "Description of a Shower in London."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25 This seems to be a vague allusion to the text, "Cast thy bread upon the
+ waters," etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26 Sir Godfrey Kneller (1646-1723), the fashionable portrait-painter of
+ the period.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27 At the General election of 1710 the contest at Westminster excited much
+ interest. The number of constituents was large, and the franchise low, all
+ householders who paid scot and lot being voters. There were, too, many
+ houses of great Whig merchants, and a number of French Protestants. But
+ the High Church candidates, Cross and Medlicott, were returned by large
+ majorities, though the Whigs had chosen popular candidates&mdash;General
+ Stanhope, fresh from his successes in Spain, and Sir Henry Dutton Colt, a
+ Herefordshire gentleman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28 Sir Andrew Fountaine (1676-1753), a distinguished antiquary, of an old
+ Norfolk family, was knighted by William III. in 1699, and inherited his
+ father's estate at Norfolk in 1706. He succeeded Sir Isaac Newton as
+ Warden of the Mint in 1727, and was Vice-Chamberlain to Queen Caroline. He
+ became acquainted with Swift in Ireland in 1707, when he went over as
+ Usher of the Black Rod in Lord Pembroke's Court.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29 See Letter 2, note 17. The Bishop was probably Dr. Moreton, Bishop of
+ Meath (see Journal, July 1, 1712).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30 The game of ombre&mdash;of Spanish origin&mdash;is described in Pope's
+ Rape of the Lock. See also the Compleat Gamester, 1721, and Notes and
+ Queries, April 8, 1871. The ace of spades, or Spadille, was always the
+ first trump; the ace of clubs (Basto) always the third. The second trump
+ was the worst card of the trump suit in its natural order, i.e. the seven
+ in red and the deuce in black suits, and was called Manille. If either of
+ the red suits was trumps, the ace of the suit was fourth trump (Punto).
+ Spadille, Manille, and Basto were "matadores," or murderers, as they never
+ gave suit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 31 See Letter 3, note 30,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 32 In the Spectator, No. 337, there is a complaint from "one of the top
+ China women about town," of the trouble given by ladies who turn over all
+ the goods in a shop without buying anything. Sometimes they cheapened tea,
+ at others examined screens or tea-dishes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 33 The Right Hon. John Grubham Howe, M.P. for Gloucestershire, an extreme
+ Tory, had recently been appointed Paymaster of the Forces. He is mentioned
+ satirically as a patriot in sec. 9 of The Tale of a Tub.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 34 George Henry Hay, Viscount Dupplin, eldest son of the sixth Earl of
+ Kinnoull, was made a Teller of the Exchequer in August, and a peer of
+ Great Britain in December 1711, with the title of Baron Hay. He married,
+ in 1709, Abigail, Harley's younger daughter, and he succeeded his father
+ in the earldom of Kinnoull in 1719.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 35 Edward Harley, afterwards Lord Harley, who succeeded his father as Earl
+ of Oxford in 1724. He married Lady Henrietta Cavendish Holles, daughter of
+ the Duke of Newcastle, but died without male issue in 1741. His interest
+ in literature caused him to form the collection known as the Harleian
+ Miscellany.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 36 William Penn (1644-1718), the celebrated founder of Pennsylvania. Swift
+ says that he "spoke very agreeably, and with much spirit."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 37 This "Memorial to Mr. Harley about the First-Fruits" is dated Oct. 7,
+ 1710.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 38 Henry St. John, created Viscount Bolingbroke in July 1712. In the
+ quarrel between Oxford and Bolingbroke in 1714, Swift's sympathies were
+ with Oxford.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 39 I.e., it is decreed by fate. So Tillotson says, "These things are fatal
+ and necessary."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 40 See Letter 3, note 8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 41 Obscure. Hooker speaks of a "blind or secret corner."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 42 Ale served in a gill measure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 43 Scott suggests that the allusion is to The Tale of a Tub.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 44 An extravagant compliment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 45 See Letter 8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 46 L'Estrange speaks of "trencher-flies and spungers."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 47 See Letter 1, note 10.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 48 Samuel Garth, physician and member of the Kit-Cat Club, was knighted in
+ 1714. He is best known by his satirical poem, The Dispensary, 1699.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 49 Gay speaks of "Wondering Main, so fat, with laughing eyes" (Mr. Pope's
+ Welcome from Greece, st. xvii.).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 50 See Letter 5, note 10.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 51 See the letter of Oct. 10, 1710, to Archbishop King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 52 See Letter 1.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 53 Seventy-three lines in folio upon one page, and in a very small hand."
+ (Deane Swift).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Letter 6.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. I.e., Lord Lieutenant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2 Tatler, No. 238.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 See Letter 1, note 12.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 Charles Coote, fourth Earl of Mountrath, and M.P. for Knaresborough. He
+ died unmarried in 1715.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 Henry Coote, Lord Mountrath's brother. He succeeded to the earldom in
+ 1715, but died unmarried in 1720.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 The Devil Tavern was the meeting-place of Ben Jonson's Apollo Club. The
+ house was pulled down in 1787.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 Addison was re-elected M.P. for Malmesbury in Oct. 1710, and he kept
+ that seat until his death in 1719.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 Captain Charles Lavallee, who served in the Cadiz Expedition of 1702,
+ and was appointed a captain in Colonel Hans Hamilton's Regiment of Foot in
+ 1706 (Luttrell, v. 175, vi. 640; Dalton's English Army Lists, iv. 126).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 See Letter 5.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 The Tatler, No. 230, Sid Hamet's Rod, and the ballad (now lost) on the
+ Westminster Election.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 The Earl of Galway (1648-1720), who lost the battle of Almanza to the
+ Duke of Berwick in 1707. Originally the Marquis de Ruvigny, a French
+ refugee, he had been made Viscount Galway and Earl of Galway successively
+ by William III.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 William Harrison, the son of a doctor at St. Cross, Winchester, had
+ been recommended to Swift by Addison, who obtained for him the post of
+ governor to the Duke of Queensberry's son. In Jan. 1711 Harrison began the
+ issue of a continuation of Steele's Tatler with Swift's assistance, but
+ without success. In May 1711, St. John gave Harrison the appointment of
+ secretary to Lord Raby, Ambassador Extraordinary at the Hague, and in Jan.
+ 1713 Harrison brought the Barrier Treaty to England. He died in the
+ following month, at the age of twenty-seven, and Lady Strafford says that
+ "his brother poets buried him, as Mr. Addison, Mr. Philips, and Dr.
+ Swift." Tickell calls him "that much loved youth," and Swift felt his
+ death keenly. Harrison's best poem is Woodstock Park, 1706.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 The last volume of Tonson's Miscellany, 1708.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 James Douglas, second Duke of Queensberry and Duke of Dover
+ (1662-1711), was appointed joint Keeper of the Privy Seal in 1708, and
+ third Secretary of State in 1709. Harrison must have been "governor"
+ either to the third son, Charles, Marquis of Beverley (born 1698), who
+ succeeded to the dukedom in 1711, or to the fourth son, George, born in
+ 1701.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 Anthony Henley, son of Sir Robert Henley, M.P. for Andover, was a
+ favourite with the wits in London. He was a strong Whig, and occasionally
+ contributed to the Tatler and Maynwaring's Medley. Garth dedicated The
+ Dispensary to him. Swift records Henley's death from apoplexy in August
+ 1711.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 Sir William Ashurst, Sir Gilbert Heathcote, and Mr. John Ward were
+ replaced by Sir Richard Hoare, Sir George Newland, and Mr. John Cass at
+ the election for the City in 1710. Scott was wrong in saying that the
+ Whigs lost also the fourth seat, for Sir William Withers had been member
+ for the City since 1707.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 Sir Richard Onslow, Bart., was chosen Speaker of the House of Commons
+ in 1708. Under George I. he was Chancellor of the Exchequer, and was
+ elevated to the peerage as Baron Onslow in 1716. He died in the following
+ year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 "The upper part of the letter was a little besmeared with some such
+ stuff; the mark is still on it" (Deane Swift).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 John Bolton, D.D., appointed a prebendary of St. Patrick's in 1691,
+ became Dean of Derry in 1699. He died in 1724. Like Swift, Bolton was
+ chaplain to Lord Berkeley, the Lord Lieutenant, and, according to Swift,
+ he obtained the deanery of Derry through Swift having declined to give a
+ bribe of 1000 pounds to Lord Berkeley's secretary. But Lord Orrery says
+ that the Bishop of Derry objected to Swift, fearing that he would be
+ constantly flying backwards and forwards between Ireland and England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20 See Letter 2, note 16.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21 "That is, to the next page; for he is now within three lines of the
+ bottom of the first" (Deane Swift).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22 See Letter 4, note 15.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23 Joshua Dawson, secretary to the Lords Justices. He built a fine house
+ in Dawson Street, Dublin, and provided largely for his relatives by the
+ aid of the official patronage in his hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24 He had been dead three weeks (see Letters 3 and 5).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25 In The Importance of the Guardian Considered, Swift says that Steele,
+ "to avoid being discarded, thought fit to resign his place of Gazetteer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26 As Swift never used the name "Stella" in the Journal, this fragment of
+ his "little language" must have been altered by Deane Swift, the first
+ editor. Forster makes the excellent suggestion that the correct reading is
+ "sluttikins," a word used in the Journal on Nov. 28, 1710. Swift often
+ calls his correspondents "sluts."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27 Godolphin, who was satirised in Sid Hamel's Rod (see Letter 2, note 3).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28 No. 230.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29 "This appears to be an interjection of surprise at the length of his
+ journal" (Deane Swift).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30 Matthew Prior, poet and diplomatist, had been deprived of his
+ Commissionership of Trade by the Whigs, but was rewarded for his Tory
+ principles in 1711 by a Commissionership of Customs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 31 "The twentieth parts are 12 pence in the pound paid annually out of all
+ ecclesiastical benefices as they were valued at the Reformation. They
+ amount to about 500 pounds per annum; but are of little or no value to the
+ Queen after the offices and other charges are paid, though of much trouble
+ and vexation to the clergy" (Swift's "Memorial to Mr. Harley").
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 32 Charles Mordaunt, the brilliant but erratic Earl of Peterborough, had
+ been engaged for two years, after the unsatisfactory inquiry into his
+ conduct in Spain by the House of Lords in 1708, in preparing an account of
+ the money he had received and expended. The change of Government brought
+ him relief from his troubles; in November he was made Captain-General of
+ Marines, and in December he was nominated Ambassador Extraordinary to
+ Vienna.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 33 Tapped, nudged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 34 I.e., told only to you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 35 Sir Hew Dalrymple (1652-1737), Lord President of the Court of Session,
+ and son of the first Viscount Stair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 36 Robert Benson, a moderate Tory, was made a Lord of the Treasury in
+ August 1710, and Chancellor of the Exchequer in the following June, and
+ was raised to the peerage as Baron Bingley in 1713. He died in 1731.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 37 The Smyrna Coffee-house was on the north side of Pall Mall, opposite
+ Marlborough House. In the Tatler (Nos. 10, 78) Steele laughed at the
+ "cluster of wise heads" to be found every evening at the Smyrna; and
+ Goldsmith says that Beau Nash would wait a whole day at a window at the
+ Smyrna, in order to receive a bow from the Prince or the Duchess of
+ Marlborough, and would then look round upon the company for admiration and
+ respect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 38 See Letter 4, note 14.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 39 See Letter 5, note 17.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 40 An Irish doctor, with whom Swift invested money.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 41 Enoch Sterne, Collector of Wicklow and Clerk to the House of Lords in
+ Ireland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 42 Claret.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 43 Colonel Ambrose Edgworth, a famous dandy, who is supposed to have been
+ referred to by Steele in No. 246 of the Tatler. Edgworth was the son of
+ Sir John Edgworth, who was made Colonel of a Regiment of Foot in 1689
+ (Dalton, iii, 59). Ambrose Edgworth was a Captain in the same regiment,
+ but father and son were shortly afterwards turned out of the regiment for
+ dishonest conduct in connection with the soldiers' clothing. Ambrose was,
+ however, reappointed a Captain in General Eric's Regiment of Foot in 1691.
+ He served in Spain as Major in Brigadier Gorge's regiment; was taken
+ prisoner in 1706; and was appointed Lieutenant-Colonel of Colonel Thomas
+ Allen's Regiment of Foot in 1707.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 44 This volume of Miscellanies in Prose and Verse was published by Morphew
+ in 1711.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 45 Dr. Thomas Lindsay, afterwards Bishop of Raphoe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Letter 7.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1 The first mention of the Vanhomrighs in the Journal. Swift had made
+ their acquaintance when he was in London in 1708.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2 Lady Elizabeth and Lady Mary (see Letter 3, note 40 and below).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 John, third Lord Ashburnham, and afterwards Earl of Ashburnham
+ (1687-1737), married, on Oct. 21, 1710, Lady Mary Butler, younger daughter
+ of the Duke of Ormond. She died on Jan. 2, 1712-3, in her twenty-third
+ year. She was Swift's "greatest favourite," and he was much moved at her
+ death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 Edward Wortley Montagu, grandson of the first Earl of Sandwich, and M.P.
+ for Huntingdon. He was a great friend of Addison's, and the second volume
+ of the Tatler was dedicated to him. In 1712 he married the famous Lady
+ Mary Pierrepont, eldest daughter of the Duke of Kingston, and under George
+ I. he became Ambassador Extraordinary to the Porte. He died in 1761, aged
+ eighty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 See Letter 5, note 27. No copy of these verses is known.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 Henry Alexander, fifth Earl of Stirling, who died without issue in 1739.
+ His sister, Lady Judith Alexander, married Sir William Trumbull, Pope's
+ friend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 "These words, notwithstanding their great obscurity at present, were
+ very clear and intelligible to Mrs. Johnson: they referred to
+ conversations, which passed between her and Dr. Tisdall seven or eight
+ years before; when the Doctor, who was not only a learned and faithful
+ divine, but a zealous Church-Tory, frequently entertained her with
+ Convocation disputes. This gentleman, in the year 1704, paid his addresses
+ to Mrs. Johnson" (Deane Swift). The Rev. William Tisdall was made D.D. in
+ 1707. Swift never forgave Tisdall's proposal to marry Esther Johnson in
+ 1704, and often gave expression to his contempt for him. In 1706 Tisdall
+ married, and was appointed Vicar of Kerry and Ruavon; in 1712 he became
+ Vicar of Belfast. He published several controversial pieces, directed
+ against Presbyterians and other Dissenters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 No. 193 of the Tatler, for July 4, 1710, contained a letter from Downes
+ the Prompter in ridicule of Harley's newly formed Ministry. This letter,
+ the authorship of which Steele disavowed, was probably by Anthony Henley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 William Berkeley, fourth Baron Berkeley of Stratton, was sworn of the
+ Privy Council in September 1710, and was appointed Chancellor of the Duchy
+ of Lancaster. He married Frances, youngest daughter of Sir John Temple, of
+ East Sheen, Surrey, and died in 1740.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 Probably the widow of Sir William Temple's son, John Temple (see Letter
+ 2, note 13). She was Mary Duplessis, daughter of Duplessis Rambouillet, a
+ Huguenot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 The Rev. James Sartre, who married Addison's sister Dorothy, was
+ Prebendary and Archdeacon of Westminster. He had formerly been French
+ pastor at Montpelier. After his death in 1713 his widow married a Mr.
+ Combe, and lived until 1750.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 William Congreve's last play was produced in 1700. In 1710, when he was
+ forty, he published a collected edition of his works. Swift and Congreve
+ had been schoolfellows at Kilkenny, and they had both been pupils of St.
+ George Ashe&mdash;afterwards Bishop of Clogher&mdash;at Trinity College,
+ Dublin. On Congreve's death, in 1729, Swift wrote, "I loved him from my
+ youth."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 See Letter 4, note 11.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 Dean Sterne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 See Letter 6, note 19.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 When he became Dean he withheld from Swift the living of St. Nicholas
+ Without, promised in gratitude for the aid rendered by Swift in his
+ election.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 Crowe was a Commissioner for Appeals from the Revenue Commissioners for
+ a short time in 1706, and was Recorder of Blessington, Co. Wicklow. In his
+ Short Character of Thomas, Earl of Wharton, 1710, Swift speaks of Whartons
+ "barbarous injustice to... poor Will Crowe."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 See Letter 3, note 10.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 See Letter 3, note 35.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20 See Letter 1, note 15.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21 Richard Tighe, M.P. for Belturbet, was a Whig, much disliked by Swift.
+ He became a Privy Councillor under George I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22 Dryden Leach, of the Old Bailey, formerly an actor, was son of Francis
+ Leach. Swift recommended Harrison to employ Leach in printing the
+ continuation of the Tatler; but Harrison discarded him. (See Journal, Jan.
+ 16, 1710-11, and Timperley's Literary Anecdotes, 600, 631).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23 The Postman, which appeared three days in the week, written by M.
+ Fonvive, a French Protestant, whom Dunton calls "the glory and mirror of
+ news writers, a very grave, learned, orthodox man." Fonvive had a
+ universal system of intelligence, at home and abroad, and "as his news is
+ early and good, so his style is excellent."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24 Sir William Temple left Esther Johnson the lease of some property in
+ Ireland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25 See Letter 5, note 23.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26 An out-of-the-way or obscure house. So Pepys (Diary, Oct. 15, 1661) "To
+ St. Paul's Churchyard to a blind place where Mr. Goldsborough was to meet
+ me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27 Sir Richard Temple, Bart., of Stowe, a Lieutenant-General who saw much
+ service in Flanders, was dismissed in 1713 owing to his Whig views, but on
+ the accession of George I. was raised to the peerage, and was created
+ Viscount Cobham in 1718. He died in 1749. Congreve wrote in praise of him,
+ and he was the "brave Cobham" of Pope's first Moral Essay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28 Richard Estcourt, the actor, died in August 1712, when his abilities on
+ the stage and as a talker were celebrated by Steele to No. 468 of the
+ Spectator. See also Tatler, Aug. 6, 1709, and Spectator, May 5, 1712.
+ Estcourt was "providore" of the Beef-Steak Club, and a few months before
+ his death opened the Bumper Tavern in James Street, Covent Garden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29 See Letter 5, note 49.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30 Poor, mean. Elsewhere Swift speaks of "the corrector of a hedge press
+ in Little Britain," and "a little hedge vicar."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 31 Thomas Herbert, eighth Earl of Pembroke, was Lord Lieutenant from April
+ 1707 to December 1708. A nobleman of taste and learning, he was, like
+ Swift, very fond of punning, and they had been great friends in Ireland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 32 See Letter 3, note 11.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 33 See Letter 3, note 18.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 34 A small town and fortress in what is now the Pas de Calais.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 35 Richard Stewart, third son of the first Lord Mountjoy (see Letter 1,
+ note 11), was M.P. at various times for Castlebar, Strabane, and County
+ Tyrone. He died in 1728.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Letter 8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1 See Letter 3, note 1.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2 Swift, Esther Johnson, and Mrs. Dingley seem to have begun their
+ financial year on the 1st of November. Swift refers to "MD's allowance" in
+ the Journal for April 23, 1713.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 Samuel Dopping, an Irish friend of Stella's, who was probably related to
+ Anthony Dopping, Bishop of Meath (died 1697), and to his son Anthony (died
+ 1743), who became Bishop of Ossory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 See Letter 2, note 17.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 The wife of Alderman Stoyte, afterwards Lord Mayor of Dublin. Mrs.
+ Stoyte and her sister Catherine; the Walls; Isaac Manley and his wife;
+ Dean Sterne, Esther Johnson and Mrs. Dingley, and Swift, were the
+ principal members of a card club which met at each other's houses for a
+ number of years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 See Letter 1, note 12.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 "This cypher stands for Presto, Stella, and Dingley; as much as to say,
+ it looks like us three quite retired from all the rest of the world"
+ (Deane Swift).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 Steele's "dear Prue," Mary Scurlock, whom he married as his second wife
+ in 1707, was a lady of property and a "cried-up beauty." She was somewhat
+ of a prude, and did not hesitate to complain to her husband, in and out of
+ season, of his extravagance and other weaknesses. The other lady to whom
+ Swift alludes is probably the Duchess of Marlborough.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 See Letter 7, note 7.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 Remembers: an Irish expression.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 This new Commission, signed by Narcissus Marsh, Archbishop of Armagh,
+ and William King, was dated Oct. 24, 1710. In this document Swift was
+ begged to take the full management of the business of the First-Fruits
+ into his hands, the Bishops of Ossory and Killala&mdash;who were to have
+ joined with him in the negotiations&mdash;having left London before Swift
+ arrived. But before this commission was despatched the Queen had granted
+ the First-Fruits and Twentieth Parts to the Irish clergy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 Lady Mountjoy, wife of the second Viscount Mountjoy (see Letter 1), was
+ Anne, youngest daughter of Murrough Boyle, first Viscount Blessington, by
+ his second wife, Anne, daughter of Charles Coote, second Earl of
+ Mountrath. After Lord Mountjoy's death she married John Farquharson, and
+ she died in 1741.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 Forster suggests that Swift wrote "Frond " or "Frowde" and there is
+ every reason to believe that this was the case. No Colonel Proud appears
+ in Dalton's Army Lists. A Colonel William Frowde, apparently third son of
+ Sir Philip Frowde, Knight, by his third wife, Margaret, daughter of Sir
+ John Ashburnham, was appointed Lieutenant-Colonel in Colonel Farrington's
+ (see note 18) Regiment of Foot in 1694. He resigned his commission on his
+ appointment to the First Life Guards in 1702, and he was in this latter
+ regiment in 1704. In November and December 1711 Swift wrote of Philip
+ Frowde the elder (Colonel William Frowde's brother) as "an old fool," in
+ monetary difficulties. It is probable that Swift's Colonel Proud (?
+ Frowde) was not Colonel William Frowde, but his nephew, Philip Frowde,
+ junior, who was Addison's friend at Oxford, and the author of two
+ tragedies and various poems. Nothing seems known of Philip Frowde's
+ connection with the army, but he is certainly called "Colonel" by Swift,
+ Addison, and Pope (see Forster's Swift, 159; Addison's Works, v. 324;
+ Pope's Works, v. 177, vi. 227). Swift wrote to Ambrose Philips in 1705,
+ "Col. Frond is just as he was, very friendly and grand reveur et distrait.
+ He has brought his poems almost to perfection." It will be observed that
+ when Swift met Colonel "Proud" he was in company with Addison, as was also
+ the case when he was with Colonel "Freind" (see Letter 3, note 25).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 Charles Davenant, LL.D., educated at Balliol College, Oxford, was the
+ eldest son of Sir William Davenant, author of Gondibert. In Parliament he
+ attacked Ministerial abuses with great bitterness until, in 1703, he was
+ made secretary to the Commissioners appointed to treat for a union with
+ Scotland. To this post was added, in 1705, an Inspector-Generalship of
+ Exports and Imports, which he retained until his death in 1714. Tom
+ Double, a satire on his change of front after obtaining his place, was
+ published in 1704. In a Note on Macky's character of Davenant, Swift says,
+ "He ruined his estate, which put him under a necessity to comply with the
+ times." Davenant's True Picture of a Modern Whig, in Two Parts, appeared
+ in 1701-2; in 1707 he published "The True Picture of a Modern Whig
+ revived, set forth in a third dialogue between Whiglove and Double," which
+ seems to be the piece mentioned in the text, though Swift speaks of the
+ pamphlet as "lately put out."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 Hugh Chamberlen, the younger (1664-1728), was a Fellow of the College
+ of Physicians and Censor in 1707, 1717, and 1721. Atterbury and the
+ Duchess of Buckingham and Normanby were among his fashionable patients.
+ His father, Hugh Chamberlen, M.D., was the author of the Land Bank Scheme
+ of 1693-94.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 Sir John Holland (see Letter 3, note 28).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 Swift may mean either rambling or gambolling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 Thomas Farrington was appointed Colonel of the newly raised 29th
+ Regiment of Foot in 1702. He was a subscriber for a copy of the Tatler on
+ royal paper (Aitken, Life of Steele, i. 329, 330).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 In The History of Vanbrugh's House, Swift described everyone as hunting
+ for it up and down the river banks, and unable to find it, until at length
+ they&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "&mdash; in the rubbish spy
+ A thing resembling a goose pie."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Sir John Vanbrugh was more successful as a dramatist than as an architect,
+ though his work at Blenheim and elsewhere has many merits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20 For the successes of the last campaign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21 John Sheffield, third Earl of Mulgrave, was created Duke of Buckingham
+ and Normanby in 1703, and died in 1721. On Queen Anne's accession he
+ became Lord Privy Seal, and on the return of the Tories to power in 1710
+ he was Lord Steward, and afterward (June 1710) Lord President of the
+ Council. The Duke was a poet, as well as a soldier and statesman, his best
+ known work being the Essay on Poetry. He was Dryden's patron, and Pope
+ prepared a collected edition of his works.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22 Laurence Hyde, created Earl of Rochester in 1682, died in 1711. He was
+ the Hushai of Dryden's Absalom and Achitophel, "the friend of David in
+ distress." In 1684 he was made Lord President of the Council, and on the
+ accession of James II., Lord Treasurer; he was, however, dismissed in
+ 1687. Under William III. Rochester was Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, an
+ office he resigned in 1703; and in September 1710 he again became Lord
+ President. His imperious temper always stood in the way of popularity or
+ real success.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23 Sir Thomas Osborne, Charles II.'s famous Minister, was elevated to the
+ peerage in 1673, and afterwards was made successively Earl of Danby,
+ Marquis of Caermarthen, and Duke of Leeds. On Nov. 29, 1710, a few days
+ after this reference to him, the Duke was granted a pension of 3500 pounds
+ a year out of the Post Office revenues. He died in July 1712, aged
+ eighty-one, and soon afterwards his grandson married Lord Oxford's
+ daughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24 This is, of course, a joke; Swift was never introduced at Court.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25 Captain Delaval (see Letter 5, note 6).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26 Admiral Sir Charles Wager (1666-1743) served in the West Indies from
+ 1707 to 1709, and gained great wealth from the prizes he took. Under
+ George I. he was Comptroller of the Navy, and in 1733 he became First Lord
+ of the Admiralty, a post which he held until 1742.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27 See Letter 7, note 27.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28 See Letter 5, note 13.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29 Isaac Bickerstaff's "valentine" sent him a nightcap, finely wrought by
+ a maid of honour to Queen Elizabeth (Tatler, No. 141). The "nightcap" was
+ a periwig with a short tie and small round head, and embroidered nightcaps
+ were worn chiefly by members of the graver professions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30 Tatler, No. 237.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 31 Tatler, No. 230.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 32 "Returning home at night, you'll find the sink
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Strike your offended sense with double stink."
+ ("Description of a City Shower, 11. 5, 6.)
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ 33 Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 34 See Letter 1, note 3.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 35 See Letter 8, note 5.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 36 See Letter 6, note 4.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 37 See Letter 1, note 11.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 38 The bellman's accents. Cf. Pepys' Diary, Jan. 16, 1659-60: "I staid up
+ till the bellman came by with his bell just under my window as I was
+ writing of this very line, and cried, 'Past one of the clock, and a cold,
+ frosty, windy morning.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0072" id="link2H_4_0072">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 9.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ 1 John Freind, M.D. (1675-1728), was a younger brother of the Robert
+ Freind, of Westminster School, mentioned elsewhere in the Journal.
+ Educated under Dr. Busby at Westminster, he was in 1694 elected a student
+ of Christ Church, where he made the acquaintance of Atterbury, and
+ supported Boyle against Bentley in the dispute as to the authorship of the
+ letters of Phalaris. In 1705 he attended the Earl of Peterborough to
+ Spain, and in the following year wrote a defence of that commander
+ (Account of the Earl of Peterborough's Conduct in Spain). A steady Tory,
+ he took a share in the defence of Dr. Sacheverell; and in 1723, when M.P.
+ for Launceston, he fell under the suspicion of the Government, and was
+ sent to the Tower. On the accession of George II., however, he came into
+ favour with the Court, and died Physician to the Queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2 See Letter 8, note 19.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 St. John was thirty-two in October 1710. He had been Secretary at War
+ six years before, resigning with Harley in 1707. Swift repeats this
+ comparison elsewhere. Temple was forty-six when he refused a Secretaryship
+ of State in 1674.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 Sir Henry St. John seems to have continued a gay man to the end of his
+ life. In his youth he was tried and convicted for the murder of Sir
+ William Estcourt in a duel (Scott). In 1716, after his son had been
+ attainted, he was made Viscount St. John. He died in 1742, aged ninety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 "Swift delighted to let his pen run into such rhymes as these, which he
+ generally passes off as old proverbs" (Scott). Many of the charming scraps
+ of "Old Ballads" and "Old Plays" at the head of Scott's own chapters are
+ in reality the result of his own imagination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 See Letter 3, note 18.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 Sir Richard Levinge, Bart., had been Solicitor-General for Ireland from
+ 1704 to 1709, and was Attorney-General from 1711 to 1714. Afterwards he
+ was Speaker of the Irish House of Commons and Chief-Justice of the Common
+ Pleas in Ireland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 See Letter 2, note 18.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 Thomas Belasyse, second Viscount Fauconberg, or Falconbridge (died
+ 1700), a nobleman of hereditary loyalty, married, in 1657, the Protector's
+ youngest daughter, Mary Cromwell, who is represented as a lady of high
+ talent and spirit. She died on March 14, 1712. Burnet describes her as "a
+ wise and worthy woman," who would have had a better prospect of
+ maintaining her father's post than either of her brothers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 Richard Freeman, Chief Baron, was Lord Chancellor of Ireland from 1707
+ until his death in November 1710.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 See Letter 7, note 17.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 Sir Richard Cox, Bart. (1650-1733), was Lord Chancellor of Ireland from
+ 1703 to 1707. In 1711 he was appointed Chief-Justice of the Queen's Bench,
+ but he was removed from office on the death of Queen Anne. His zealous
+ Protestantism sometimes caused his views to be warped, but he was honest
+ and well-principled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 Sir Thomas Hanmer, Bart. (1676-1746), succeeded Bromley as Speaker in
+ 1714. In February 1713 Swift said, "He is the most considerable man in the
+ House of Commons." His edition of Shakespeare was published by the
+ University of Oxford in 1743-44. Pope called it "pompous," and sneered at
+ Hanmer's "superior air" (Dunciad, iv. 105).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 See Letter 5, note 8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 Elliot was keeper of the St. James's Coffee-house (see Letter 1).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 Forster suggested that the true reading is "writhing." If so, it is not
+ necessary to suppose that Lady Giffard was the cause of it. Perhaps it is
+ the word "tiger" that is corrupt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 The Hon. Charles Boyle (1676-1731), of the Boyle and Bentley
+ controversy, succeeded to the peerage as Lord Orrery in 1703. When he
+ settled in London he became the centre of a Christ Church set, a strong
+ adherent of Harley's party, and a member of Swift's "club." His son John,
+ fifth Earl of Orrery, published Remarks on the Life and Writings of
+ Jonathan Swift in 1751.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 William Domville, a landed proprietor in County Dublin, whom Swift
+ called "perfectly as fine a gentleman as I know."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 On May 16, 1711, Swift wrote, "There will be an old to do." The word is
+ found in Elizabethan writers in the sense of "more than enough." Cf.
+ Macbeth, ii. 3: "If a man were porter of hell gate, he should have old
+ turning the key."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20 See Letter 3, note 10. Clements was related to Pratt, the Deputy
+ Vice-Treasurer, and was probably the Robert Clements who became Deputy
+ Vice-Treasurer, and whose grandson Robert was created Earl of Leitrim in
+ 1795.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21 Letter 5, note 11.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22 Swift's sister Jane, who had married a currier in Bride Street, named
+ Joseph Fenton, a match to which Swift strongly objected. Deane Swift says
+ that Swift never saw his sister again after the marriage; he had offered
+ her 500 pounds if she would show a "proper disdain" of Fenton. On her
+ husband's dying bankrupt, however, Swift paid her an annuity until 1738,
+ when she died in the same lodging with Esther Johnson's mother, Mrs.
+ Bridget Mose, at Farnham (Forster's Swift, pp. 118-19).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23 Welbore Ellis, appointed Bishop of Kildare in 1705. He was translated
+ to Meath in 1731, and died three years later.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24 The expression of the Archbishop is, "I am not to conceal from you that
+ some expressed a little jealously, that you would not be acceptable to the
+ present courtiers; intimating that you were under the reputation of being
+ a favourite of the late party in power" (King to Swift, Nov. 2, 1710).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25 This indignant letter is dated Nov. 23, 1710. It produced an apologetic
+ reply from the Archbishop (Nov. 30, 1710), who represented that the letter
+ to Southwell was a snare laid in his way, since if he declined signing it,
+ it might have been interpreted into disrespect to the Duke of Ormond. Of
+ the bishops King said, "You cannot do yourself a greater service than to
+ bring this to a good issue, to their shame and conviction."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0073" id="link2H_4_0073">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 10.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ 1 William Bromley (died 1732) was M.P. for the University of Oxford. A
+ good debater and a strong High Churchman, he was Secretary of State from
+ August 1713 until the Queen's death in the following year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2 Colonel, afterwards Major-General, John Hill (died 1735) was younger
+ brother of Mrs. Masham, the Queen's favourite, and a poor relation of the
+ Duchess of Marlborough. He was wounded at Mons in 1709, and in 1711 was
+ sent on an unsuccessful expedition to attack the French settlements in
+ North America. In 1713 he was appointed to command the troops at Dunkirk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 "The footmen in attendance at the Houses of Parliament used at this time
+ to form themselves into a deliberative body, and usually debated the same
+ points with their masters. It was jocularly said that several questions
+ were lost by the Court party in the menial House of Lords which were
+ carried triumphantly in the real assembly; which was at length explained
+ by a discovery that the Scottish peers whose votes were sometimes decisive
+ of a question had but few representatives in the convocation of lacqueys.
+ The sable attendant mentioned by Swift, being an appendage of the brother
+ of Mrs. Masham, the reigning favourite, had a title to the chair, the
+ Court and Tory interest being exerted in his favour" (Scott). Steele
+ alludes to the "Footmen's Parliament" in No. 88 of the Spectator.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 See Letter 1, note 3.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 A Court of Equity abolished in the reign of Charles I. It met in the
+ Camera Alba, or Whitehall, and the room appears to have retained the name
+ of the old Court.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 See Letter 6, note 2.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 Swift's first contribution to the Examiner (No. 13) is dated Nov. 2,
+ 1710.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 Seduced, induced. Dryden (Spanish Friar) has "To debauch a king to break
+ his laws."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 Freeman (see Letter 9, note 10).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 "To make this intelligible, it is necessary to observe, that the words
+ 'this fortnight', in the preceding sentence, were first written in what he
+ calls their little language, and afterwards scratched out and written
+ plain. It must be confessed this little language, which passed current
+ between Swift and Stella, has occasioned infinite trouble in the revisal
+ of these papers" (Deane Swift).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 Trim. An attack upon the liberties of this corporation is among the
+ political offences of Wharton's Lieutenancy of Ireland set forth in
+ Swift's Short Character of the Earl of Wharton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 Apologies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 "A Description of the Morning," in No. 9 of the Tatler.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 See Letter 6, note 19.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 William Palliser (died 1726).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 See Letter 4, note 15.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 "Here he writ with his eyes shut; and the writing is somewhat crooked,
+ although as well in other respects as if his eyes had been open" (Deane
+ Swift).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 Tatler, No. 249; cf. p. 93. During this visit to London Swift
+ contributed to only three Tatlers, viz. Nos. 230, 238, and 258.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 St. Andrew's Day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20 No. 241.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21 Tatler, No. 258.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22 Lieutenant-General Philip Bragg, Colonel of the 28th Regiment of Foot,
+ and M.P. for Armagh, died in 1759.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23 James Cecil, fifth Earl of Salisbury, who died in 1728.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24 See Letter 2, note 13.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25 See Letter 8, note 22.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26 Kneller seems never to have painted Swift's portrait.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27 On Nov. 25 and 28.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28 Arthur Annesley, M.P. for Cambridge University, had recently become
+ fifth Earl of Anglesea, on the death of his brother (see Letter 3, note
+ 35). Under George I. he was Joint Treasurer of Ireland, and Treasurer at
+ War.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29 A Short Character of the Earl of Wharton, by Swift himself, though the
+ authorship was not suspected at the time. "Archbishop King," says Scott,
+ "would have hardly otherwise ventured to mention it to Swift in his letter
+ of Jan. 9, 1710, as 'a wound given in the dark.'" Elsewhere, however, in a
+ note, Swift hints that Archbishop King was really aware of the authorship
+ of the pamphlet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30 A false report. (See Letter 11, note 4.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 31 None of these Commissioners of Revenue lost their places at this time.
+ Samuel Ogle was Commissioner from 1699 to 1714; John South from 1696 until
+ his death in 1711; and Sir William St. Quintin, Bart., from 1706 to 1713.
+ Stephen Ludlow succeeded South in September 1711.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 32 See Letter 7, note 35.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 33 James Hamilton, sixth Earl of Abercorn (1656-1734), a Scotch peer who
+ had strongly supported the Union of 1706.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0074" id="link2H_4_0074">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 11.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ 1 L'Estrange speaks of "insipid twittle twattles." Johnson calls this "a
+ vile word."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2 A cousin of Swift's; probably a son of William Swift.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 Nicholas Sankey (died 1722) succeeded Lord Lovelace as Colonel of a
+ Regiment of Foot in Ireland in 1689. He became Brigadier-General in 1704,
+ Major-General 1707, and Lieutenant-General 1710. He served in Spain, and
+ was taken prisoner at the battle of the Caya in 1709.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 See Letter 10, note 30.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 The Earl of Abercorn (see Letter 10, note 33) married, in 1686,
+ Elizabeth, only child of Sir Robert Reading, Bart., of Dublin, by Jane,
+ Dowager Countess of Mountrath. Lady Abercorn survived her husband twenty
+ years, dying in 1754, aged eighty-six.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 Charles Lennox, first Duke of Richmond and Gordon (1672-1723), was the
+ illegitimate son of Charles II. by Madame de Querouaille.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 Sir Robert Raymond, afterwards Lord Raymond (1673-1733), M.P. for
+ Bishop's Castle, Shropshire, was appointed Solicitor-General in May 1710,
+ and was knighted in October. He was removed from office on the accession
+ of George I., but was made Attorney-General in 1720, and in 1724 became a
+ judge of the King's Bench. In the following year he was made Lord
+ Chief-Justice, and was distinguished both for his learning and his
+ impartiality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 Lynn-Regis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 Richard Savage, fourth Earl Rivers, the father of Richard Savage, the
+ poet. Under the Whigs Lord Rivers was Envoy to Hanover; and after his
+ conversion by Harley, he was Constable of the Tower under the Tories. He
+ died in 1712.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 Chancellor of the Exchequer in Ireland from 1695 until his death in
+ 1717.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 Lord Shelburne's clever sister, Anne, only daughter of Sir William
+ Petty, and wife of Thomas Fitzmaurice, Lord of Kerry, afterwards created
+ first Earl of Kerry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 Mrs. Pratt, an Irish friend of Lady Kerry, lodged at Lord Shelburne's
+ during her visit to London. The reference to Clements (see Letter 9, note
+ 20), Pratt's relative, in the Journal for April 14, 1711, makes it clear
+ that Mrs. Pratt was the wife of the Deputy Vice-Treasurer of Ireland, to
+ whom Swift often alludes (see Letter 3, note 10).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 Lieutenant-General Thomas Meredith, Major-General Maccartney, and
+ Brigadier Philip Honeywood. They alleged that their offence only amounted
+ to drinking a health to the Duke of Marlborough, and confusion to his
+ enemies. But the Government said that an example must be made, because
+ various officers had dropped dangerous expressions about standing by their
+ General, Marlborough, who was believed to be aiming at being made Captain
+ General for life. For Maccartney see the Journal for Nov. 15, 1712, seq.
+ Meredith, who was appointed Adjutant-General of the Forces in 1701, was
+ made a Lieutenant-General in 1708. He saw much service under William III.,
+ and Marlborough, and was elected M.P. for Midhurst in 1709. He died in
+ 1719 (Dalton's Army Lists, III. 181). Honeywood entered the army in 1694;
+ was at Namur; and was made a Brigadier-General before 1711. After the
+ accession of George I. he became Colonel of a Regiment of Dragoons, and
+ commanded a division at Dettingen. At his death in 1752 he was acting as
+ Governor of Portsmouth, with the rank of General (Dalton, iv. 30).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 Or "malkin"; a counterfeit, or scarecrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 William Cadogan, Lieutenant-General and afterwards Earl Cadogan
+ (1675-1726), a great friend of Marlborough, was Envoy to the United
+ Provinces and Spanish Flanders. Cadogan retained the post of Lieutenant to
+ the Tower until 1715.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 Earl Cadogan's father, Henry Cadogan, barrister, married Bridget,
+ daughter of Sir Hardresse Waller, and sister of Elizabeth, Baroness
+ Shelburne in her own right.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 See Letter 5, note 30.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 Cadogan married Margaretta, daughter of William Munter, Counsellor of
+ the Court of Holland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 Presumably the eldest son, William, who succeeded his father as second
+ Earl of Kerry in 1741, and died in 1747. He was at Eton and Christ Church,
+ Oxford, and was afterwards a Colonel in the Coldstream Guards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20 Henry Petty, third Lord Shelburne, who became Earl of Shelburne in
+ 1719. His son predeceased him, without issue, and on Lord Shelburne's
+ death, in 1751, his honours became extinct. His daughter Anne also died
+ without issue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21 The menagerie, which had been one of the sights of London, was removed
+ from the Tower in 1834. In his account of the Tory Fox Hunter in No. 47 of
+ the Freeholder, Addison says, "Our first visit was to the lions."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22 Bethlehem Hospital, for lunatics, in Moorfields, was a popular "sight"
+ in the eighteenth century. Cf. the Tatler, No. 30: "On Tuesday last I took
+ three lads, who are under my guardianship, a rambling, in a hackney coach,
+ to show them the town: as the lions, the tombs, Bedlam."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23 The Royal Society met at Gresham College from 1660 to 1710. The
+ professors of the College lectured on divinity, civil law, astronomy,
+ music, geometry, rhetoric, and physic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24 The most important of the puppet-shows was Powell's, in the Little
+ Piazza, Covent Garden, which is frequently mentioned in the Tatler.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25 The precise nature this negligent costume is not known, but it is
+ always decried by popular writers of the time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26 Retched. Bacon has "Patients must not keck at them at the first."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27 Swift was born on November 30.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28 Mrs. De la Riviere Manley, daughter of Sir Roger Manley, and cousin of
+ John Manley, M.P., and Isaac Manley (see Letter 3, note 3), wrote poems
+ and plays, but is best known for her "Secret Memoirs and Manners of
+ Several Persons of Quality, of both sexes. From the New Atalantis, 1709,"
+ a book abounding in scandalous references to her contemporaries. She was
+ arrested in October, but was discharged in Feb. 1710. In May 1710 she
+ brought out a continuation of the New Atalantis, called "Memoirs of Europe
+ towards the Close of the Eighth Century." In June 1711 she became editress
+ of the Tory Examiner, and wrote political pamphlets with Swift's
+ assistance. Afterwards she lived with Alderman Barber, the printer, at
+ whose office she died in 1724. In her will she mentioned her "much
+ honoured friend, the Dean of St. Patrick, Dr. Swift."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29 "He seems to have written these words in a whim; for the sake of what
+ follows" (Deane Swift).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30 See Letter 8, note 33.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 31 No. 249 (see Letter 10, note 18).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 32 See Letter 5, note 34.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 33 In a letter to the Rev. Dr. Tisdall, of Dec. 16, 1703, Swift said:
+ "I'll teach you a way to outwit Mrs. Johnson: it is a new-fashioned way of
+ being witty, and they call it a bite. You must ask a bantering question,
+ or tell some damned lie in a serious manner, and then she will answer or
+ speak as if you were in earnest; and then cry you, 'Madam, there's a
+ bite!' I would not have you undervalue this, for it is the constant
+ amusement in Court, and everywhere else among the great people." See, too,
+ the Tatler, No. 12, and Spectator, Nos. 47, 504: "In a word, a Biter is
+ one who thinks you a fool, because you do not think him a knave."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 34 See Letter 9, note 4.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 35 "As I hope to be saved;" a favourite phrase in the Journal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 36 See Letter 7, note 12.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 37 This statement receives some confirmation from a pamphlet published in
+ September 1710, called "A Condoling Letter to the Tatler: On Account of
+ the Misfortunes of Isaac Bickerstaf Esq., a Prisoner in the &mdash;&mdash;
+ on Suspicion of Debt."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 38 Dr. Lambert, chaplain to Lord Wharton, was censured in Convocation for
+ being the author of a libellous letter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 39 Probably the same person as Dr. Griffith, spoken of in the Journal for
+ March 3, 1713,&mdash;when he was ill,&mdash;as having been "very tender
+ of" Stella.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 40 See Letter 9, note 22.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 41 Vexed, offended. Elsewhere Swift wrote, "I am apt to grate the ears of
+ more than I could wish."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 42 Ambrose Philips, whose Pastorals had been published in the same volume
+ of Tonson's Miscellany as Pope's. Two years later Swift wrote, "I should
+ certainly have provided for him had he not run party mad." In 1712 his
+ play, The Distrest Mother, received flattering notice in the Spectator,
+ and in 1713, to Pope's annoyance, Philips' Pastorals were praised in the
+ Guardian. His pretty poems to children led Henry Carey to nickname him
+ "Namby Pamby."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 43 An equestrian statue of William III., in College Green, Dublin. It was
+ common, in the days of party, for students of the University of Dublin to
+ play tricks with this statue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 44 Lieutenant-General Richard Ingoldsby (died 1712) was Commander of the
+ Forces in Ireland, and one of the Lords Justices in the absence of the
+ Lord Lieutenant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 45 This seems to have been a mistake; cf. Journal for July 13, 1711, Alan
+ Brodrick, afterwards Viscount Midleton, a Whig politician and lawyer, was
+ made Chief Justice of the Queen's Bench in Ireland in 1709, but was
+ removed from office in June 1711, when Sir Richard Cox succeeded him. On
+ the accession of George I. he was appointed Lord Chancellor for Ireland.
+ Afterwards he declined to accept the dedication to him of Swift's Drapiers
+ Letters, and supported the prosecution of the author. He died in 1728.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 46 Robert Doyne was appointed Chief Baron of the Exchequer in Ireland in
+ 1695, and Chief Justice of the Common Pleas in 1703. This appointment was
+ revoked on the accession of George I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 47 See Letter 9, note 12.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 48 Of the University of Dublin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 49 See Letter 2, note 18 and Letter 3, note 4. Sir Thomas Frankland's
+ eldest son, Thomas, who afterwards succeeded to the baronetcy, acquired a
+ fortune with his first wife, Dinah, daughter of Francis Topham, of
+ Agelthorpe, Yorkshire. He died in 1747.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 50 See Letter 8, note 21.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 51 see Letter 4, note 15.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 52 Mary, daughter of Sir John Williams, Bart., and widow of Charles Petty,
+ second Lord Shelburne, who died in 1696. She had married, as her second
+ husband, Major-General Conyngham, and, as her third husband, Colonel
+ Dallway.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 53 Dr. John Vesey became Bishop of Limerick in 1672, and Archbishop of
+ Tuam in 1678. He died in 1716.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 54 See Letter 3, note 39.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 55 Sex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 56 Toby Caulfeild, third son of the fifth Lord Charlemont. In 1689 he was
+ Colonel to the Earl of Drogheda's Regiment of Foot, and about 1705 he
+ succeeded to the command of Lord Skerrin's Regiment of Foot. After serving
+ in Spain his regiment was reduced, having lost most of its men (Luttrell,
+ vi. 158).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 57 John Campbell, second Duke of Argyle (1680-1743), was installed a
+ Knight of the Garter in December 1710, after he had successfully opposed a
+ vote of thanks to Marlborough, with whom he had quarrelled. It was of this
+ nobleman that Pope wrote&mdash; "Argyle, the State's whole thunder born to
+ wield, And shake alike the senate and the field." In a note to Macky's
+ Memoirs, Swift describes the Duke as an "ambitious, covetous, cunning
+ Scot, who had no principle but his own interests and greatness."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 58 Harley's second wife, Sarah, daughter of Simon Middleton, of Edmonton,
+ and sister of Sir Hugh Middleton, Bart. She died, without issue, in 1737.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 59 Elizabeth Harley, then unmarried, the daughter of Harley's first wife,
+ Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas Foley, of Whitley Court, Worcestershire. She
+ subsequently married the Marquis of Caermarthen, afterwards Duke of Leeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 60 Harcourt (see Letter 3, note 24).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 61 William Stawel, the third baron, who succeeded to the title in 1692,
+ was half-brother to the second Baron Stawel. The brother here referred to
+ was Edward, who succeeded to the title as fourth baron in 1742.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0075" id="link2H_4_0075">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 12.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ 1 Charles Finch, third Earl of Winchelsea, son of Lord Maidstone, and
+ grandson of Heneage, second Earl of Winchelsea. On his death in 1712 Swift
+ spoke of him as "a worthy honest gentleman, and particular friend of
+ mine."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2 Vedeau was a shopkeeper, who abandoned his trade for the army (Journal,
+ March 28, April 4, 1711). Swift calls him "a lieutenant, who is now broke,
+ and upon half pay" (Journal, Nov. 18, 1712)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 Sir Edmund Bacon, Bart. (died 1721), of Herringflat, Suffolk, succeeded
+ his father in the baronetcy in 1686.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 The reverse at Brihuega.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 See Letter 8, note 12.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 John Barber, a printer, became Lord Mayor of London in 1732, and died in
+ 1741. Mrs. Manley was his mistress, and died at his printing office. Swift
+ speaks of Barber as his "very good and old friend."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 Bernage was an officer serving under Colonel Fielding. In August 1710 a
+ difficulty arose through Arbuthnot trying to get his brother George made
+ Captain over Bernage's head; but ultimately Arbuthnot waived the business,
+ because he would not wrong a friend of Swift's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 See Letter 1, note 52.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 George Smalridge (1663-1719), the High Church divine and popular
+ preacher, was made Dean of Carlisle in 1711, and Bishop of Bristol in
+ 1714. Steele spoke of him in the Tatler (Nos. 73, 114) as "abounding in
+ that sort of virtue and knowledge which makes religion beautiful."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 St. Albans Street, Pall Mall, was removed in 1815 to make way for
+ Waterloo Place. It was named after Henry Jermyn, Earl of St. Albans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 Ben Portlack, the Duke of Ormond's secretary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 Algernon Seymour, Earl of Hertford (1684-1750), only son of Charles
+ Seymour, Duke of Somerset. Lord Hertford succeeded to the dukedom in 1748.
+ From 1708 to 1722 he was M.P. for Northumberland, and from 1708 to 1713 he
+ took an active part in the war in Flanders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 See Letter 4.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 A Short Character of the Earl of Wharton (see Letter 10. note 29).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 See Letter 9.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 Henry Herbert, the last Baron Herbert of Cherbury, succeeded to the
+ peerage in 1709, and soon afterwards married a sister of the Earl of
+ Portsmouth. A ruined man, he committed suicide in 1738.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 Nos. 257, 260.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 See Letter 6, note 12.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 "AFTER is interlined" (Deane Swift).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20 With this account may be compared what Pope says, as recorded in
+ Spence's Anecdotes, p. 223: "Lord Peterborough could dictate letters to
+ nine amanuenses together, as I was assured by a gentleman who saw him do
+ it when Ambassador at Turin. He walked round the room, and told each of
+ them in his turn what he was to write. One perhaps was a letter to the
+ emperor, another to an old friend, a third to a mistress, a fourth to a
+ statesman, and so on: yet he carried so many and so different connections
+ in his head, all at the same time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21 Francis Atterbury, Dean of Carlisle, had taken an active part in the
+ defence of Dr. Sacheverell. After a long period of suspense he received
+ the appointment of Dean of Christ Church, and in 1713 he was made Bishop
+ of Rochester and Dean of Westminster. Atterbury was on intimate terms with
+ Swift, Pope, and other writers on the Tory side, and Addison&mdash;at
+ whose funeral the Bishop officiated&mdash;described him as "one of the
+ greatest geniuses of his age."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22 John Carteret, second Baron Carteret, afterwards to be well known as a
+ statesman, succeeded to the peerage in 1695, and became Earl Granville and
+ Viscount Carteret on the death of his brother in 1744. He died in 1763. In
+ October 1710, when twenty years of age, he had married Frances, only
+ daughter of Sir Robert Worsley, Bart., of Appuldurcombe, Isle of Wight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23 Dillon Ashe, D.D., Vicar of Finglas, and brother of the Bishop of
+ Clogher. In 1704 he was made Archdeacon of Clogher, and in 1706 Chancellor
+ of Armagh. He seems to have been too fond of drink.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24 Henley (see Letter 6, note 15) married Mary, daughter of Peregrine
+ Bertie, the second son of Montagu, Earl of Lindsey, and with her obtained
+ a fortune of 30,000 pounds. After Henley's death his widow married her
+ relative, Henry Bertie, third son of James, Earl of Abingdon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25 Hebrews v. 6.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0076" id="link2H_4_0076">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 13.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ 1 Probably Mrs. Manley and John Barber (see Letter 11, note 28 and Letter
+ 12, note 6).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2 Sir Andrew Fountaine's (see Letter 5, note 28) father, Andrew Fountaine,
+ M.P., married Sarah, daughter of Sir Thomas Chicheley, Master of the
+ Ordnance. Sir Andrew's sister, Elizabeth, married Colonel Edward Clent.
+ The "scoundrel brother," Brig, died in 1746, aged sixty-four (Blomefield's
+ Norfolk, vi. 233-36).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 Dame Overdo, the justice's wife in Ben Jonson's Bartholomew Fair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 See Letter 3, note 5.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 Atterbury, who had recently been elected Prolocutor to the Lower House
+ of Convocation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 Dr. Sterne, Dean of St. Patrick's, was not married.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 January 6 was Twelfth-night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 Garraway's Coffee-house, in Change Alley, was founded by Thomas Garway,
+ the first coffee-man who sold and retailed tea. A room upstairs was used
+ for sales of wine "by the candle."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 Sir Constantine Phipps, who had taken an active part in Sacheverell's
+ defence. Phipps' interference in elections in the Tory interest made him
+ very unpopular in Dublin, and he was recalled on the death of Queen Anne.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+10 Joseph Trapp, one of the seven poets alluded to in the distich:&mdash;
+"Alma novem genuit celebres Rhedycina poetas, Bubb, Stubb, Gru
+ Trapp wrote a tragedy in 1704, and in 1708 was chosen the first
+Professor of Poetry at Oxford. In 1710 he published pamphlets on behalf
+of Sacheverell, and in 1712 Swift secured for him the post of chaplain
+to Bolingbroke. During his latter years he held several good livings.
+Elsewhere Swift calls him a "coxcomb."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ 11 See Letter 7, note 21.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 The extreme Tories, who afterwards formed the October Club.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 Crowd. A Jacobean writer speaks of "the lurry of lawyers," and "a lurry
+ and rabble of poor friars."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 See Letter 5, note 10.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 St. John's first wife was Frances, daughter and co-heiress of Sir Henry
+ Winchcombe, Bart., of Berkshire, and in her right St. John enjoyed the
+ estates of Bucklebury, which on her death in 1718 passed to her sister. In
+ April 1711 Swift said that "poor Mrs. St. John" was growing a great
+ favourite of his; she was going to Bath owing to ill-health, and begged
+ him to take care of her husband. She "said she had none to trust but me,
+ and the poor creature's tears came fresh in her eyes." Though the marriage
+ was, naturally enough, unhappy, she did not leave St. John's house until
+ 1713, and she returned to him when he fell from power. There are letters
+ from her to Swift as late as 1716, not only doing her best to defend his
+ honour, but speaking of him with tenderness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 "Battoon" means (1) a truncheon; (2) a staff of office. Luttrell, in
+ 1704, speaks of "a battoon set with diamonds sent him from the French
+ king."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 Edward Harley, second son of Sir Edward Harley, was M.P. for Leominster
+ and Recorder of the same town. In 1702 he was appointed Auditor of the
+ Imposts, a post which he held until his death in 1735. His wife, Sarah,
+ daughter of Thomas Foley, was a sister of Robert Harley's wife, and his
+ eldest son eventually became third Earl of Oxford. Harley published
+ several books on biblical subjects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 See Letter 6, note 12. The last number of Steele's Tatler appeared on
+ Jan. 2, 1711; Harrison's paper reached to fifty-two numbers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 Dryden Leach (see Letter 7, note 22).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20 Cf. Letter 7, October 28th.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21 Published by John Baker and John Morphew. See Aitken's Life of Steele,
+ i. 299-301.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22 In No. 224 of the Tatler, Addison, speaking of polemical
+ advertisements, says: "The inventors of Strops for Razors have written
+ against one another this way for several years, and that with great
+ bitterness." See also Spectator, Nos. 428, 509, and the Postman for March
+ 23, 1703: "The so much famed strops for setting razors, etc., are only to
+ be had at Jacob's Coffee-house.... Beware of counterfeits, for such are
+ abroad."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23 Sir John Holland (see Letter 3, note 28).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24 Addison speaks of a fine flaxen long wig costing thirty guineas
+ (Guardian, No. 97), and Duumvir's fair wig, which Phillis threw into the
+ fire, cost forty guineas (Tatler, No. 54)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25 Swift's mother, Abigail Erick, was of a Leicestershire family, and
+ after her husband's death she spent much of her time with her friends near
+ her old home. Mr. Worrall, vicar of St. Patrick's, with whom Swift was on
+ terms of intimacy in 1728-29, was evidently a relative of the Worralls
+ where Mrs. Swift had lodged, and we may reasonably suppose that he owed
+ the living to Swift's interest in the family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26 The title of a humorous poem by Lydgate. A "lickpenny" is a greedy or
+ grasping person.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+27 Small wooden blocks used for lighting fires. See Swift ("Description
+of the Morning"), "The small-coal man was heard with cadence deep,
+ Till drowned in shriller notes of chimney-sweep;" and Gay (Trivia, ii.
+35), "When small-coal murmurs in the hoarser throat,
+ From smutty dangers guard thy threatened coat."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ 28 The Tory Ministers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0077" id="link2H_4_0077">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 14.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ 1 See Letter 7, note 22.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ 2 Thomas Southerne's play of Oroonoko, based on Mrs. Aphra Behn's novel of
+ the same name, was first acted in 1696.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 "Mrs." Cross created the part of Mrs. Clerimont in Steele's Tender
+ Husband in 1705.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 See Letter 12, note 7.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 George Granville, afterwards Lord Lansdowne, was M.P. for Cornwall, and
+ Secretary at War. In December 1711 he was raised to the peerage, and in
+ 1712 was appointed Comptroller of the Household. He died in 1735, when the
+ title became extinct. Granville wrote plays and poems, and was a patron of
+ both Dryden and Pope. Pope called him "Granville the polite." His Works in
+ Verse and Prose appeared in 1732.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 Samuel Masham, son of Sir Francis Masham, Bart., had been a page to the
+ Queen while Princess of Denmark, and an equerry and gentleman of the
+ bed-chamber to Prince George. He married Abigail Hill (see Letter 16, note
+ 7), daughter of Francis Hill, a Turkey merchant, and sister of General
+ John Hill, and through that lady's influence with the Queen he was raised
+ to the peerage as Baron Masham, in January 1712. Under George I. he was
+ Remembrancer of the Exchequer. He died in 1758.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 A roughly printed pamphlet, The Honourable Descent, Life, and True
+ Character of the... Earl of Wharton, appeared early in 1711, in reply to
+ Swift's Short Character; but that can hardly be the pamphlet referred to
+ here, because it is directed against libellers and backbiters, and cannot
+ be described as "pretty civil."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 "In that word (the seven last words of the sentence huddled into one)
+ there were some puzzling characters" (Deane Swift).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 Sir Robert Worsley, Bart., married, in 1690, Frances, only daughter of
+ the first Viscount Weymouth. Their daughter Frances married Lord Carteret
+ (see Letter 12, note 22) in 1710. In a letter to Colonel Hunter in March
+ 1709 Swift spoke of Lady (then Mrs.) Worsley as one of the principal
+ beauties in town. See, too, Swift's letter to her of April 19, 1730: "My
+ Lady Carteret has been the best queen we have known in Ireland these many
+ years; yet is she mortally hated by all the young girls, because (and it
+ is your fault) she is handsomer than all of them together."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 See Letter 3, note 1.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 See Letter 5, note 17.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 William Stratford, son of Nicholas Stratford, Bishop of Chester, was
+ Archdeacon of Richmond and Canon of Christ Church, Oxford, until his death
+ in 1729.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 See Letter 3, note 22.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 James, third Earl of Berkeley (1680-1736), whom Swift calls a "young
+ rake" (see Letter 16, note 15). The young Countess of Berkeley was only
+ sixteen on her marriage. In 1714 she was appointed a lady of the
+ bed-chamber to Caroline, Princess of Wales, and she died of smallpox in
+ 1717, aged twenty-two. The Earl was an Admiral, and saw much service
+ between 1701 and 1710; under George I. he was First Lord of the Admiralty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 Edward Wettenhall was Bishop of Kilmore from 1699 to 1713.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 In the Dedication to The Tale of a Tub Swift had addressed Somers in
+ very different terms: "There is no virtue, either in public or private
+ life, which some circumstances of your own have not often produced upon
+ the stage of the world."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 Their lodgings, opposite to St. Mary's Church in Stafford Street,
+ Dublin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0078" id="link2H_4_0078">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 15.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ 1 The Stamp Act was not passed until June 1712: see the Journal for Aug.
+ 7, 1712.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2 Both in St. James's Park. The Canal was formed by Charles II. from
+ several small ponds, and Rosamond's Pond was a sheet of water in the
+ south-west corner of the Park, "long consecrated," as Warburton said, "to
+ disastrous love and elegiac poetry." It is often mentioned as a place of
+ assignation in Restoration plays. Evelyn (Diary, Dec. 1, 1662) describes
+ the "scheets" used on the Canal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 Mrs. Beaumont.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 The first direct mention of Hester Vanhomrigh. She is referred to only
+ in two other places in the Journal (Feb. 14, 1710-11, and Aug, 14, 1711).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 See Letter 3, note 17.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 No. 27, by Swift himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 No. 7 of Harrison's series.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 The printers of the original Tatler.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 Harley had forwarded to Swift a banknote for fifty pounds (see Journal,
+ March 7, 1710-11).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 At Moor Park.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 Scott says that Swift here alludes to some unidentified pamphlet of
+ which he was the real or supposed author.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 See Letter 11, note 13.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 The Examiner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 See Letter 6, note 43.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 Mistaken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 Mrs. De Caudres, "over against St. Mary's Church, near Capel Street,"
+ where Stella now lodged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 "A crease in the sheet" (Deane Swift).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 "In the original it was, good mallows, little sollahs. But in these
+ words, and many others, he writes constantly ll for rr" (Deane Swift).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 See Letter 4, note 19.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20 "Those letters which are in italics in the original are of a monstrous
+ size, which occasioned his calling himself a loggerhead" (Deane Swift).
+ (Italics replaced by capitals for the transcription of this etext.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21 I.e., to ask whether.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0079" id="link2H_4_0079">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 16.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ 1 Harcourt.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ 2 "A shilling passes for thirteenpence in Ireland" (Deane Swift).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 Robert Cope, a gentleman of learning with whom Swift corresponded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 Archdeacon Morris is not mentioned in Cotton's Fasti Ecclesiae
+ Hiberniae.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 See Letter 14, note 6.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 See Letter 10, note 2.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 Abigail Hill, afterwards Lady Masham, had been introduced into the
+ Queens service as bed-chamber woman by the Duchess of Marlborough. Her
+ High Church and Tory views recommended her to Queen Anne, and in 1707 she
+ was privately married to Mr. Samuel Masham, a gentleman in the service of
+ Prince George (see Letter 14, note 6). The Duchess of Marlborough
+ discovered that Mrs. Masham's cousin, Harley, was using her influence to
+ further his own interests with the Queen; and in spite of her violence the
+ Duchess found herself gradually supplanted. From 1710 Mrs. Masham's only
+ rival in the royal favour was the Duchess of Somerset. Afterwards she
+ quarrelled with Harley and joined the Bolingbroke faction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 See Letter 4, note 16.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 No. 14 of Harrison's series.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 See Letter 15, note 4.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 Richard Duke, a minor poet and friend of Dryden's, entered the Church
+ about 1685. In July 1710 he was presented by the Bishop of Winchester to
+ the living of Witney, Oxfordshire, which was worth 700 pounds a year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 Sir Jonathan Trelawney, one of the seven bishops committed to the Tower
+ in 1688, was translated to Winchester in 1707, when he appointed Duke to
+ be his chaplain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 See Letter 4, note 3.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 See Letter 3, note 39.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 See Letter 14, note 14.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 See Letter 7, note 28.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 Cf. Feb. 22, 1711.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 Esther Johnson lodged opposite St. Mary's in Dublin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 This famous Tory club began with the meeting together of a few extreme
+ Tories at the Bell in Westminster. The password to the Club&mdash;"October"&mdash;was
+ one easy of remembrance to a country gentleman who loved his ale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20 "Duke" Disney, "not an old man, but an old rake," died in 1731. Gay
+ calls him "facetious Disney," and Swift says that all the members of the
+ Club "love him mightily." Lady M. W. Montagu speaks of his
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Broad plump face, pert eyes, and ruddy skin,
+ Which showed the stupid joke which lurked within."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Disney was a French Huguenot refugee, and his real name was Desaulnais. He
+ commanded an Irish regiment, and took part in General Hill's expedition to
+ Canada in 1711 (Kingsford's Canada, ii. 465). By his will (Wentworth
+ papers, 109) he "left nothing to his poor relations, but very handsome to
+ his bottle companions."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21 There were several Colonel Fieldings in the first half of the
+ eighteenth century, and it is not clear which is the one referred to by
+ Swift. Possibly he was the Edmund Fielding&mdash;grandson of the first
+ Earl of Denbigh&mdash;who died a Lieutenant-General in 1741, at the age of
+ sixty-three, but is best known as the father of Henry Fielding, the
+ novelist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22 Cf. Feb. 17, 1711.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23 See Letter 3, note 37.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24 "It is a measured mile round the outer wall; and far beyond any the
+ finest square in London" (Deane Swift).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25 "The common fare for a set-down in Dublin" (ib.).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26 "Mrs. Stoyte lived at Donnybrook, the road to which from Stephen's
+ Green ran into the country about a mile from the south-east corner" (ib.).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27 "Those words in italics are written in a very large hand, and so is the
+ word large" (ib.). (Italics replaced by capitals for the transcription of
+ this etext.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28 Deane Swift alters "lele" to "there," but in a note states how he here
+ altered Swift's "cypher way of writing." No doubt "lele" and other
+ favourite words occurred frequently in the MS., as they do in the later
+ letters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0080" id="link2H_4_0080">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 17.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ 1 Sir Thomas Mansel, Bart., Comptroller of the Household to Queen Anne,
+ and a Lord of the Treasury, was raised to the peerage in December 1711 as
+ Baron Mansel of Margam. He died in 1723.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2 Lady Betty Butler and Lady Betty Germaine (see Letter 3, note 40 and
+ Letter 4, note 3).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 James Eckershall, "second clerk of the Queen's Privy Kitchen."
+ Chamberlayne (Magnae Britanniae Notitia, 1710, p. 536) says that his wages
+ were 11 pounds, 8 shillings and a penny-ha'penny, and board-wages 138
+ pounds, 11 shillings and tenpence-ha'penny, making 150 pounds in all.
+ Afterwards Eckershall was gentleman usher to Queen Anne; he died at
+ Drayton in 1753, aged seventy-four. Pope was in correspondence with him in
+ 1720 on the subject of contemplated speculations in South Sea and other
+ stocks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 In October 1710 (see Letter 6, note 44) Swift wrote as if he knew about
+ the preparation of these Miscellanies. The volume was published by Morphew
+ instead of Tooke, and it is frequently referred to in the Journal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 In 1685 the Duke of Ormond (see Letter 2, note 10) married, as his
+ second wife, Lady Mary Somerset, eldest surviving daughter of Henry, first
+ Duke of Beaufort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 Arthur Moore, M.P., was a Commissioner of Trade and Plantations from
+ 1710 until his death in 1730. Gay calls him "grave," and Pope ("Prologue
+ to the Satires," 23) says that Moore blamed him for the way in which his
+ "giddy son," James Moore Smythe, neglected the law.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 James, Lord Paisley, who succeeded his father (see Letter 10, note 33)
+ as seventh Earl of Abercorn in 1734, married, in 1711, Anne, eldest
+ daughter of Colonel John Plumer, of Blakesware, Herts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 Harley's ill-health was partly due to his drinking habits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 Crowd or confusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 The first wife of Charles Seymour, sixth Duke of Somerset, was Lady
+ Elizabeth Percy, only daughter of Joscelyn, eleventh Earl of
+ Northumberland, and heiress of the house of Percy. She married the Duke,
+ her third husband, at the age of eighteen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 John Richardson, D.D., rector of Armagh, Cavan, and afterwards chaplain
+ to the Duke of Ormond. In 1711 he published a Proposal for the Conversion
+ of the Popish Natives of Ireland to the Established Religion, and in 1712
+ a Short History of the Attempts to Convert the Popish Natives of Ireland.
+ In 1709 the Lower House of Convocation in Ireland had passed resolutions
+ for printing the Bible and liturgy in Irish, providing Irish preachers,
+ etc. In 1711 Thomas Parnell, the poet, headed a deputation to the Queen on
+ the subject, when an address was presented; but nothing came of the
+ proposals, owing to fears that the English interest in Ireland might be
+ injured. In 1731 Richardson was given the small deanery of Kilmacluagh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 See Feb. 27, 1711.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 Harley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 "Bank bill for fifty pound," taking the alternate letters (see Letter
+ 15, note 9).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 See Letter 5, note 17.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 See Nos. 27 and 29, by Swift himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 "Print cannot do justice to whims of this kind, as they depend wholly
+ upon the awkward shape of the letters" (Deane Swift).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 See Letter 8, note 2.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 "Here is just one specimen given of his way of writing to Stella in
+ these journals. The reader, I hope, will excuse my omitting it in all
+ other places where it occurs. The meaning of this pretty language is: 'And
+ you must cry There, and Here, and Here again. Must you imitate Presto,
+ pray? Yes, and so you shall. And so there's for your letter. Good-morrow'"
+ (Deane Swift). What Swift really wrote was probably as follows: "Oo must
+ cly Lele and Lele and Lele aden. Must oo mimitate Pdfr, pay? Iss, and so
+ oo sall. And so lele's fol oo rettle. Dood-mallow."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20 Lady Catherine Morice (died 1716) was the eldest daughter of Thomas
+ Herbert, Earl of Pembroke, and wife of Sir Nicholas Morice, Bart., M.P.
+ for Newport.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21 Perhaps Henry Arundell, who succeeded his father as fifth Baron
+ Arundell of Wardour in 1712, and died in 1726.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22 Antoine, Abbe de Bourlie and Marquis de Guiscard, was a cadet of a
+ distinguished family of the south of France. He joined the Church, but
+ having been driven from France in consequence of his licentious excesses,
+ he came to England, after many adventures in Europe, with a recommendation
+ from the Duke of Savoy. Godolphin gave him the command of a regiment of
+ refugees, and employed him in projects for effecting a landing in France.
+ These schemes proving abortive, Guiscard's regiment was disbanded, and he
+ was discharged with a pension of 500 pounds a year. Soon after the Tories
+ came to power Guiscard came to the conclusion that there was no hope of
+ employment for him, and little chance of receiving his pension; and he
+ began a treacherous correspondence with the French. When this was detected
+ he was brought before the Privy Council, and finding that everything was
+ known, and wishing a better death than hanging, he stabbed Harley in the
+ breast. Mrs. Manley, under Swift's directions, wrote a Narrative of
+ Guiscard's Examination, and the incident greatly added to the security of
+ Harley's position, and to the strength of the Government.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23 Harley's surgeon, Mr. Green.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24 See Letter 9, note 20.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25 Mrs. Walls' baby (see Feb 5, 1711).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26 The phrase had its origin in the sharp practices in the horse and
+ cattle markets. Writing to Arbuthnot in 1727, Swift said that Gay "had
+ made a pretty good bargain (that is a Smithfield) for a little place in
+ the Custom House."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27 "There."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0081" id="link2H_4_0081">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 18.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ 1 See Swift's paper in the Examiner, No. 32, and Mrs. Manley's pamphlet,
+ already mentioned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2 Presumably Mrs. Johnson's palsy-water (see Letter 5, note 17).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 Thomas Wentworth, Baron Raby (1672-1739), was created Viscount Wentworth
+ and Earl of Strafford in June 1711. Lord Raby was Envoy and Ambassador at
+ Berlin for some years, and was appointed Ambassador at the Hague in March
+ 1711. In November he was nominated as joint Plenipotentiary with the
+ Bishop of Bristol to negotiate the terms of peace. He objected to Prior as
+ a colleague; Swift says he was "as proud as hell." In 1715 it was proposed
+ to impeach Strafford, but the proceedings were dropped. In his later years
+ he was, according to Lord Hervey, a loquacious and illiterate, but
+ constant, speaker in the House of Lords.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 A beauty, to whom Swift addressed verses in 1708. During the frost of
+ January 1709 Swift wrote: "Mrs. Floyd looked out with both her eyes, and
+ we had one day's thaw; but she drew in her head, and it now freezes as
+ hard as ever." She was a great friend of Lady Betty Germaine's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 Swift never had the smallpox.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 See Letter 12, note 22.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 Heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 The first number of the Spectator appeared on March 1, 1711.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 In one of his poems Swift speaks of Stella "sossing in an easy-chair."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 See Letter 4, note 20.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 "It is reasonable to suppose that Swift's acquaintance with Arbuthnot
+ commenced just about this time; for in the original letter Swift misspells
+ his name, and writes it Arthbuthnet, in a clear large hand, that MD might
+ not mistake any of the letters" (Deane Swift). Dr. John Arbuthnot had been
+ made Physician in Ordinary to the Queen; he was one of Swift's dearest
+ friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 Clobery Bromley, M.P. for Coventry, son of William Bromley, M.P. (see
+ Letter 10, note 1), died on March 20, 1711, and Boyer (Political State, i.
+ 255) says that the House, "out of respect to the father, and to give him
+ time, both to perform the funeral rites and to indulge his just
+ affliction," adjourned until the 26th.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 See Letter 5, note 4.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 See Letter 17, note 11.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 Sir John Perceval, Bart. (died 1748), was created Baron Perceval 1715,
+ Viscount Perceval 1722, and Earl of Egmont 1733, all in the Irish peerage.
+ He married, in 1710, Catherine, eldest daughter of Sir Philip Parker
+ A'Morley, Bart., of Erwarton, Suffolk; and his son (born Feb. 27, 1710-11)
+ was made Baron Perceval and Holland, in the English peerage, in 1762.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 This report was false. The Old Pretender did not marry until 1718, when
+ he was united to the Princess Clementina Maria, daughter of Prince James
+ Sobieski.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Letter 19.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1 John Hartstonge, D.D. (died 1717), was Bishop of Ossory from 1693 to
+ 1714, when he was translated to Derry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2 See Letter 15, note 16.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 Thomas Proby was Chirurgeon-General in Ireland from 1699 until his death
+ in 1761. In his Short Character of Thomas, Earl of Wharton, Swift speaks
+ of him as "a person universally esteemed," who had been badly treated by
+ Lord Wharton. In 1724 Proby's son, a captain in the army, was accused of
+ popery, and Swift wrote to Lord Carteret that the charge was generally
+ believed to be false: "The father is the most universally beloved of any
+ man I ever knew in his station.... You cannot do any personal thing more
+ acceptable to the people of Ireland than in inclining towards lenity to
+ Mr. Proby and his family." Proby was probably a near relative of Sir
+ Thomas Proby, Bart., M.P., of Elton, Hunts, at whose death in 1689 the
+ baronetcy expired. Mrs. Proby seems to have been a Miss Spencer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 Meliora, daughter of Thomas Coningsby, Baron of Clanbrassil and Earl of
+ Coningsby, and wife of Sir Thomas Southwell, afterwards Baron Southwell,
+ one of the Commissioners of Revenue in Ireland, and a member of the Irish
+ Privy Council. Lady Southwell died in 1736.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 Lady Betty Rochfort was the daughter of Henry Moore, third Earl of
+ Drogheda. Her husband, George Rochfort, M.P. for Westmeath, was son of
+ Robert Rochfort, an Irish judge, and brother of Robert Rochford, M.P., to
+ whose wife Swift addressed his Advice to a very Young Lady on her
+ Marriage. Lady Betty's son Robert was created Earl of Belvedere in 1757.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 See Letter 17, note 23. Mr. Bussiere, of Suffolk Street, had been called
+ in directly after the outrage, but Radcliffe would not consult him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 The letter from Dr. King dated March 17, 1711, commenting on Guiscard's
+ attack upon Harley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 See Feb. 10, 1710-11.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 The word "trangram" or "tangram" ordinarily means a toy or gimcrack, or
+ trumpery article. Cf. Wycherley (Plain Dealer, iii. 1), "But go, thou
+ trangram, and carry back those trangrams which thou hast stolen or
+ purloined." Apparently "trangum" here means a tally.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 See Letter 12, note 2.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 Swift means Godolphin, the late Lord Treasurer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 Sir John Holland (see Letter 3, note 28).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 "It caused a violent daub on the paper, which still continues much
+ discoloured in the original" (Deane Swift).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 "He forgot here to say, 'At night.' See what goes before" (Deane
+ Swift).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 See Letter 17, note 1.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 Irishman. "Teague" was a term of contempt for an Irishman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 To "Mr. Harley, wounded by Guiscard." In this piece Prior said,
+ "Britain with tears shall bathe thy glorious wound," a wound which could
+ not have been inflicted by any but a stranger to our land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 Sir Thomas Mansel married Martha, daughter and heiress of Francis
+ Millington, a London merchant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 Slatterning, consuming carelessly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20 "The candle grease mentioned before, which soaked through, deformed
+ this part of the paper on the second page" (Deane Swift).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21 Harcourt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22 William Rollinson, formerly a wine merchant, settled afterwards in
+ Oxfordshire, where he died at a great age. He was a friend of Pope,
+ Bolingbroke, and Gay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23 In relation to the banknote (see Letter 17, note 14).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24 "Swift was, at this time, their great support and champion" (Deane
+ Swift).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25 See Letter 14, note 15.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26 See Letter 17, note 25.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27 "Stella, with all her wit and good sense, spelled very ill; and Dr.
+ Swift insisted greatly upon women spelling well" (Deane Swift).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28 "The slope of the letters in the words THIS WAY, THIS WAY, is to the
+ left hand, but the slope of the words THAT WAY, THAT WAY, is to the right
+ hand" (Deane Swift).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29 See Letter 17, note 24.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30 See Letter 5, note 11 and Letter 10, note 28.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0082" id="link2H_4_0082">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 20.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ 1 By the Act 9 Anne, cap. 23, the number of hackney coaches was increased
+ to 800, and it was provided that they were to go a mile and a half for one
+ shilling, two miles for one shilling and sixpence, and so on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2 See Letter 11, note 39.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 In a letter to Swift, of March 17, 1711, King said that it might have
+ been thought that Guiscard's attack would have convinced the world that
+ Harley was not in the French interest; but it did not have that effect
+ with all, for some whispered the case of Fenius Rufus and Scevinus in the
+ 15th book of Tacitus: "Accensis indicibus ad prodendum Fenium Rufum, quem
+ eundem conscium et inquisitorem non tolerabant." Next month Swift told
+ King that it was reported that the Archbishop had applied this passage in
+ a speech made to his clergy, and explained at some length the steps he had
+ taken to prevent the story being published in the Postboy. King thanked
+ Swift for this action, explaining that he had been arguing on Harley's
+ behalf when someone instanced the story of Rufus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 A Tory paper, published thrice weekly by Abel Roper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 Sir Charles Duncombe, banker, died on April 9, 1711. The first wife of
+ the Duke of Argyle (see Letter 11, note 57) was Duncombe's niece, Mary
+ Browne, daughter of Ursula Duncombe and Thomas Browne, of St. Margaret's,
+ Westminster. Duncombe was elected Lord Mayor in 1700, and was the richest
+ commoner in England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 The Rev. Dillon Ashe (see Letter 12, note 23).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 John, fourth Baron Poulett, was created Earl Poulett in 1706, after
+ serving as one of the Commissioners for the Treaty of Union with Scotland.
+ From August 1710 to May 1711 he was First Lord of the Treasury, and from
+ June 1711 to August 1714 he was Lord Steward of the Household.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 Lost or stupid person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 Sir William Read, a quack who advertised largely in the Tatler and other
+ papers. He was satirised in No. 547 of the Spectator. In 1705 he was
+ knighted for his services in curing many seamen and soldiers of blindness
+ gratis, and he was appointed Oculist in Ordinary to the Queen. Read died
+ in 1715, but his business was continued by his widow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 General John Webb was not on good terms with Marlborough. He was a
+ Tory, and had gained distinction in the war at Wynendale (1708), though
+ the Duke's secretary gave the credit, in the despatch, to Cadogan. There
+ is a well-known account of Webb in Thackeray's Esmond. He was severely
+ wounded at Malplaquet in 1709, and in 1710 was given the governorship of
+ the Isle of Wight. He died in 1724.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 Henry Campion, M.P. for Penryn, is mentioned in the Political State for
+ February 1712 as one of the leading men of the October Club. Campion seems
+ to have been Member, not for Penryn, but for Bossiney.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 See Letter 3, note 32.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 Sir George Beaumont, Bart., M.P. for Leicester, and an acquaintance of
+ Swift's mother, was made a Commissioner of the Privy Seal in 1712, and one
+ of the Lords of the Admiralty in 1714. He died in 1737.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 Heneage Finch, afterwards second Earl of Aylesford, was the son of
+ Heneage Finch, the chief counsel for the seven bishops, who was created
+ Baron Guernsey in 1703, and Earl of Aylesford in 1714.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 James, Lord Compton, afterwards fifth Earl of Northampton, was the
+ eldest son of George, the fourth Earl. He was summoned to the House of
+ Lords in December 1711, and died in 1754.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 See Letter 11, note 12.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0083" id="link2H_4_0083">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 21.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ 1 In 1670 Temple thanked the Grand Duke of Tuscany for "an entire vintage
+ of the finest wines of Italy" (Temple's Works, 1814, ii. 155-56).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2 Mrs. Manley (see Letter 17, note 22).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 Charles Caesar, M.P. for Hertford, was appointed Treasurer of the Navy
+ in June 1711, in the room of Robert Walpole.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 Joseph I. His successor was his brother Charles, the King of Spain
+ recognised by England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 Simon Harcourt, M.P. for Wallingford. He married Elizabeth, sister of
+ Sir John Evelyn, Bart., and died in 1720, aged thirty-five, before his
+ father. He was secretary to the society of "Brothers," wrote verses, and
+ was a friend of the poets. His son Simon was created Earl Harcourt in
+ 1749, and was Lord Lieutenant of Ireland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 Doiley, a seventeenth-century linen-draper,&mdash;probably "Thomas
+ Doyley, at the Nun, in Henrietta Street, Covent Garden,"&mdash;invented
+ stuffs which "might at once be cheap and genteel" (Spectator, No. 283).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 A special envoy. The Resident from Venice in 1710 was Signor Bianchi.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 See Letter 17, note 5.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 Nanfan Coote, second Earl of Bellamont, who died in 1708, married, in
+ 1705, Lucia Anna, daughter of Henry de Nassau, Lord of Auverquerque, and
+ sister of Henry, first Earl of Grantham. She died in 1744.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 "Farnese" (Deane Swift).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 See Letter 20, note 3.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 Swift's changes of residence during the period covered by the Journal
+ were numerous. On Sept. 20, 1710, he moved from Pall Mall to Bury Street,
+ "where I suppose I shall continue while in London." But on Dec. 28 he went
+ to new lodgings in St. Albans Street, Haymarket. On April 26, 1711, he
+ moved to Chelsea, and from there to Suffolk Street, to be near the
+ Vanhomrighs. He next moved to St. Martins Street, Leicester Fields; and a
+ month later to Panton Street, Haymarket. In 1712 he lodged for a time at
+ Kensington Gravel Pits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 At raffling for books.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 James Brydges, Paymaster-General, and afterwards Duke of Chandos (see
+ Letter 3, note 31).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 Thomas Foley, M.P. for Worcestershire, was created Baron Foley in
+ December 1711, and died in 1733.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 See 25th April, 1711 and Letter 20, note 3.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 See Letter 19, note 3.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 Charles Dering, second son of Sir Edward Dering, Bart., M.P. for Kent,
+ was Auditor of the Exchequer in Ireland, and M.P. for Carlingford.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 See Letter 11, note 44.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20 See Letter 17, note 4.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21 A Whig paper, for the most part by Mainwaring and Oldmixon, in
+ opposition to the Examiner. It appeared weekly from October 1710 to August
+ 1711.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22 See Letter 17, note 22.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23 See Spectator, No. 50, by Addison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24 In all probability a mistake for "Wesley" (see Letter 1, note 12).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0084" id="link2H_4_0084">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 22.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ 1 Lord Paisley (see Letter 17, note 7).
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ 2 See Letter 11, note 5.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 Sir Hovenden Walker. The "man midwife" was Sir Chamberlen Walker, his
+ younger brother. The "secret expedition" against Quebec conveyed upwards
+ of 5000 soldiers, under the command of General John Hill (see Letter 10,
+ note 2), but owing to the want of due preparations and the severe weather
+ encountered, the fleet was compelled to return to England without
+ accomplishing anything.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 Robert Freind, elder brother of John Freind, M.D. (see Letter 9, note
+ 1), became headmaster of Westminster School in 1711, and held the
+ appointment until 1733. He was Rector of Witney, and afterwards Canon of
+ Windsor, Prebendary of Westminster, and Canon of Christ Church. He died in
+ 1751, aged eighty-four.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 Christopher Musgrave was Clerk of the Ordnance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 Atterbury's wife, Katherine Osborn, has been described as "the
+ inspiration of his youth and the solace of his riper years."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 The original Chelsea Bun House, in Jew's Row, was pulled down in 1839.
+ Sir R. Philips, writing in 1817, said, "Those buns have afforded a
+ competency, and even wealth, to four generations of the same family; and
+ it is singular that their delicate flavour, lightness, and richness have
+ never been successfully imitated."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 See Letter 8, note 22. King wrote to Swift (May 15, 1711), "The death of
+ the Earl of Rochester is a great blow to all good men, and even his
+ enemies cannot but do justice to his character. What influence it will
+ have on public affairs God only knows."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 See Letter 11, note 11.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 See Letter 17, note 6.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 See Letter 18, note 4.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 See Letter 20, note 13.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 Swift's curate at Laracor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 Queen Anne was the last sovereign who exercised the supposed royal gift
+ of healing by touch. Dr. Johnson was touched by her, but without effect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 Richard Thornhill was tried at the Old Bailey on May 18, 1711, for the
+ murder of Sir Cholmley Dering, M.P. for Kent, and found guilty of
+ manslaughter only; but he was shortly afterwards assassinated (see Journal
+ for Aug. 21, 1711; Spectator, No. 84). The quarrel began on April 27, when
+ they fell to blows, and Thornhill being knocked down, had some teeth
+ struck out by Sir C. Dering stamping on him. The spectators then
+ interfered, and Dering expressed himself as ready to beg pardon; but
+ Thornhill not thinking this was sufficient satisfaction, gave Dering the
+ lie, and on May 9 sent him a challenge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 Tothill Fields, Westminster, was a favourite place for duels in the
+ seventeenth century.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 See Letter 13, note 17.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 Benjamin Burton, a Dublin banker, and brother-in-law of Swift's friend
+ Stratford (see Letter 3, note 22). Swift says he hated this "rogue."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0085" id="link2H_4_0085">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 23.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ 1 The day on which the Club met. See letter from Swift to St. John, May
+ 11, 1711.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2 Henry Barry, fourth Lord Barry of Santry (1680-1734), was an Irish Privy
+ Councillor, and Governor of Derry. In 1702 he married Bridget, daughter of
+ Sir Thomas Domville, Bart., and in an undated letter (about 1735) to Lady
+ Santry Swift spoke of his esteem for her, "although I had hardly the least
+ acquaintance with your lord, nor was at all desirous to cultivate it,
+ because I did not at all approve of his conduct." Lord Santry's only son
+ and heir, who was born in 1710, was condemned to death for the murder of a
+ footman in 1739, when the barony became extinct by forfeiture. See B. W.
+ Adams's History of Santry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 Probably Captain Cammock, of the Speedwell, of 28 guns and 125 men
+ (Luttrell, vi. 331), who met on July 13, 1708, off Scotland, two French
+ privateers, one of 16, the other of 18 guns, and fought them several
+ hours. The first privateer got off, much shattered; the other was brought
+ into Carrickfergus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 See Letter 7, note 21.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 See Letter 13, note 10.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 This valuable pamphlet is signed "J.G.," and is believed to be by John
+ Gay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 Edmund Curll's collection of Swift's Miscellanies, published in 1711,
+ was an expansion of a pamphlet of 1710, "A Meditation upon a Broomstick,
+ and somewhat beside, of the same Author's."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 "In this passage DD signifies both Dingley and Stella" (Deane Swift).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 Sir Henry Craik's reading. The old editions have, "It would do: DD goes
+ as well as Presto," which is obviously corrupt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 Cf. Journal, June 17, 1712.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 Cf. "old doings" (see Letter 9, note 19.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 See Letter 17, note 11.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 Rymer's Foedera, in three volumes, which Swift obtained for Trinity
+ College, Dublin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 See Letter 6, note 43 and 9th Feb. 1710-11.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 Stephen Colledge, "the Protestant joiner," was hanged in 1681. He had
+ published attacks on the Roman Catholics, and had advocated resistance to
+ Charles II.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 See Letter 3, note 39.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 Mitford Crowe was appointed Governor of Barbados in 1706, and before
+ his departure for that island went to Spain, "to settle the accounts of
+ our army there, of which he is paymaster" (Luttrell, vi. 104). In 1710
+ charges of bribery brought against him by merchants were inquired into by
+ the Privy Council, but he seems to have cleared himself, for in June 1711
+ Swift speaks of him as Governor of Jamaica. He died in 1719.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 See Letter 8, note 21.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 Swift's uncle Adam "lived and died in Ireland," and left no son.
+ Another daughter of his became Mrs. Whiteway.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20 William Lowndes, M.P., secretary to the Treasury, whom Walpole called
+ "as able and honest a servant as ever the Crown had."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21 The Lord Treasurer's staff: since the dismissal of Godolphin, the
+ Treasurership had been held in commission.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22 "As I hope to be saved."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23 Stella's maid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24 See letter from King to Swift, May 15, 1711. Alderman Constantine, a
+ High Churchman, indignant at being passed over by a junior in the contest
+ for the mayoralty, brought the matter before the Council Board, and
+ produced an old by-law by which aldermen, according to their ancientry,
+ were required to keep their mayoralty. King took the side of the city, but
+ the majority was for the by-law, and disapproved of the election;
+ whereupon the citizens repealed the by-law and re-elected the same
+ alderman as before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0086" id="link2H_4_0086">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 24.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ 1 The Lord Treasurer's staff.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ 2 Swift's "little parson cousin," the resident chaplain at Moor Park. He
+ pretended to have had some part in The Tale of a Tub, and Swift always
+ professed great contempt for him. Thomas Swift was son of an Oxford uncle
+ of Swift's, of the same name, and was at school and college with Swift. He
+ became Rector of Puttenham, Surrey, and died in 1752, aged eighty-seven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 The Duke of Ormond's daughter, Lady Mary Butler (see Letter 7, notes 2
+ and 3.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 Thomas Harley, the Lord Treasurer's cousin, was secretary to the
+ Treasury.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 Lord Oxford's daughter Elizabeth married, in 1712, the Marquis of
+ Caermarthen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 Henry Tenison, M.P. for County Louth, was one of the Commissioners of
+ the Revenue in Ireland from 1704 until his death in 1709 (Luttrell, v.
+ 381, vi. 523). Probably he was related to Dr. Tenison, Bishop of Meath,
+ who died in 1705.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 Anne Finch (died 1720), daughter of Sir William Kingsmill, and wife of
+ Heneage Finch, who became fourth Earl of Winchelsea in 1712. Lady
+ Winchelsea published a volume of poems in 1713, and was a friend of Pope
+ and Rowe. Wordsworth recognised the advance in the growth of attention to
+ "external nature" shown in her writings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 See Letter 23, note 24 and Letter 30, note 13.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 This was a mistake. Charles Hickman, D.D., Bishop of Derry, died in
+ November 1713.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 "These words in italics are written in a large round hand" (Deane
+ Swift). (Italics replaced by capitals for the transcription of this
+ etext.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 "This entry is interlined in the original" (Deane Swift).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 Colonel James Graham (1649-1730) held various offices under James II.,
+ and was granted a lease of a lodge in Bagshot Park. Like his brother,
+ Viscount Preston, he was suspected of treasonable practices in 1691, and
+ he was arrested in 1692 and 1696. Under Queen Anne and George I., Colonel
+ Graham was M.P. for Appleby and Westmorland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 Mr. Leslie Stephen has pointed out that this is the name of an inn (now
+ the Jolly Farmer) near Frimley, on the hill between Bagshot and
+ Farnborough. This inn is still called the Golden Farmer on the Ordnance
+ map.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 "Soley" is probably a misreading for "sollah," a form often used by
+ Swift for "sirrah," and "figgarkick" may be "pilgarlick" (a poor creature)
+ in Swift's "little language" (cf. 20th Oct. 1711).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 See Letter 14, note 14.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 Probably a misprint for "Bertie." This Mr. Bertie may have been the
+ Hon. James Bertie, second son of the first Earl of Abingdon, and M.P. for
+ Middlesex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 Evelyn Pierrepont, fifth Earl of Kingston, was made Marquis of
+ Dorchester in 1706. He became Duke of Kingston-upon-Hull in 1715, and died
+ in 1726. Lady Mary Wortley Montagu was his daughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 See Letter 12, note 22.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 Sir Thomas Thynne, first Viscount Weymouth, who died in 1714, aged
+ seventy-four, married Frances, daughter of Heneage Finch, second Earl of
+ Winchelsea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20 See Letter 7, note 31.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21 Swift is referring to St. John's defence of Brydges (see Letter 21,
+ note 14.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22 "He does not mean smoking, which he never practised, but snuffing up
+ cut-and-dry tobacco, which sometimes was just coloured with Spanish snuff;
+ and this he used all his life, but would not own that he took snuff"
+ (Deane Swift).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23 Beaumont (see Letter 1, note 2).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24 Sir Alexander Cairnes, M.P. for Monaghan, a banker, was created a
+ baronet in 1706, and died in 1732.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25 See Letter 6, note 44 and Letter 17, note 4.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26 Isaac Manley (see Letter 3, note 3.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27 Sir Thomas Frankland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28 See Letter 5, note 8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29 Hockley-in-the-Hole, Clerkenwell, a place of public diversion, was
+ famous for its bear and bull baitings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30 Sir William Seymour, second son of Sir Edward Seymour, Bart., of Berry
+ Pomeroy, retired from the army in 1717, and died in 1728 (Dalton's Army
+ Lists). He was wounded at Landen and Vigo, and saw much service between
+ his appointment as a Captain of Fusiliers in 1686 and his promotion to the
+ rank of Lieutenant-General in 1707.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 31 No. 45.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 32 "And now I conceive the main design I had in writing these papers is
+ fully executed. A great majority of the nation is at length thoroughly
+ convinced that the Queen proceeded with the highest wisdom, in changing
+ her Ministry and Parliament" (Examiner, No. 45).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 33 Edward Harley (see Letter 13, note 17).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 34 See Letter 24, note 2.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 35 Tom Ashe was an elder brother of the Bishop of Clogher. He had an
+ estate of more than 1000 pounds a year in County Meath, and Nichols
+ describes him as of droll appearance, thick and short in person: "a
+ facetious, pleasant companion, but the most eternal unwearied punster that
+ ever lived."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 36 "Even Joseph Beaumont, the son, was at this time an old man, whose grey
+ locks were venerable; yet his father lived until about 1719" (Deane
+ Swift).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Letter 25.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1 Sir William Wyndham, Bart. (1687-1740), was M.P. for Somerset. He was a
+ close partisan of Bolingbroke's, and in 1713 introduced the Schism Bill,
+ which drove Oxford from office. Wyndham became Chancellor of the
+ Exchequer, and was afterwards a leading opponent of Walpole. His wife,
+ Lady Catherine Seymour (died 1713), was the second daughter of Charles,
+ Duke of Somerset (see Letter 28, note 8).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2 Swift was afterwards President of this Club, which is better known as
+ "the Society."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 Perhaps Daniel Reading, M.P. for Newcastle, Co. Dublin.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+4 Afterwards Congreve formed a friendship with the Whigs; or, as Swift
+put it, "Took proper principles to thrive,
+ And so might every dunce alive."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ 5 Atterbury.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 This pamphlet, published in February 1712, was called "A Proposal for
+ Correcting, Improving, and Ascertaining the English Tongue, in a Letter to
+ the... Lord High Treasurer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 No. 47
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 Francis Gastrell, Canon of Christ Church, was made Bishop of Chester in
+ 1713. His valuable Notitia Cestriensis was published in 1845-50.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 Near Fulham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 See Letter 12, note 21.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 The daughters of Meinhardt Schomberg, Duke of Leinster, in Ireland, and
+ third Duke of Schomberg. Lady Mary married Count Dagenfeldt, and Lady
+ Frederica married, first, the Earl of Holderness, and, secondly, Earl Fitz
+ Walter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 Thomas Harley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 See Letter 19, note 3.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0087" id="link2H_4_0087">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 26.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ 1 The widow of Sir John Lyndon, who was appointed a justice of the Court
+ of King's Bench in Ireland in 1682, and died in 1699.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2 "Marmaduke Coghill, LL.D., was judge of the Prerogative Court in
+ Ireland. About this time he courted a lady, and was soon to have been
+ married to her; but unfortunately a cause was brought to trial before him,
+ wherein a man was sued for beating his wife. When the matter was agitated,
+ the Doctor gave his opinion, 'That although a man had no right to beat his
+ wife unmercifully, yet that, with such a little cane or switch as he then
+ held in his hand, a husband was at liberty, and was invested with a power,
+ to give his wife moderate correction'; which opinion determined the lady
+ against having the Doctor. He died an old man and a bachelor" (Deane
+ Swift). See also Lascelles, Liber Muner. Hibern., part ii. p. 80.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 This was a common exclamation of the time, but the spelling varies in
+ different writers. It seems to be a corruption of "God so," or "God ho,"
+ but there may have been a confusion with "cat-so," derived from the
+ Italian "cazzo."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 See Letter 9, note 28. Mrs. Manley was now editing the Examiner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 Sir Henry Belasyse was sent to Spain as Commissioner to inquire into the
+ state of the English forces in that country. The son of Sir Richard
+ Belasyse, Knight of Ludworth, Durham, Sir Henry finished a chequered
+ career in 1717, when he was buried in Westminster Abbey (Dalton's Army
+ Lists, ii. 228). In his earlier years he served under the United
+ Provinces, and after the accession of William was made a Brigadier-General
+ in the English army, and in 1694, Lieutenant-General. In 1702 he was
+ second in command of the expedition to Cadiz, but he was dismissed the
+ service in consequence of the looting of Port St. Mary. Subsequently he
+ was elected M.P. for Durham, and in 1713 was appointed Governor of
+ Berwick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 Atterbury.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 See Letter 3, note 20.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 Sir John Powell, a Judge of the Queen's Bench, died in 1713, aged
+ sixty-eight. He was a kindly as well as able judge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 See June 7th, 1711.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 This Tisdall has been described as a Dublin merchant; but in all
+ probability he was Richard Tisdall, Registrar of the Irish Court of
+ Chancery, and M.P. for Dundalk (1707-1713) and County Louth (1713-1727).
+ He married Marian, daughter of Richard Boyle, M.P., and died in 1742.
+ Richard Tisdall was a relative of Stella's suitor, the Rev. William
+ Tisdall, and years afterwards Swift took an interest in his son Philip,
+ who became a Secretary of State and Leader of the Irish House of Commons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 "In Ireland there are not public paths from place to place, as in
+ England" (Deane Swift).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 See Letter 24, note 6.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 Probably a son of John Manley, M.P. (see Letter 5, note 8).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 See Letter 11, note 45.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 Dr. George Stanhope, who was Vicar of Lewisham as well as of Deptford.
+ He was a popular preacher and a translator of Thomas a Kempis and other
+ religious writers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 See Letter 3, note 17.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 A favourite word with Swift, when he wished to indicate anything
+ obscure or humble.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 See Letter 17, note 11.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 See June 7th, 1711 and notes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20 See Letter 17, note 23.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21 Thomas Mills (1671-1740) was made Bishop of Waterford and Lismore in
+ 1708. A man of learning and a liberal contributor to the cost of church
+ restorations, he is charged by Archbishop King with giving all the
+ valuable livings in his gift to his non-resident relatives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22 Tooke was appointed printer of the London Gazette in 1711 (see Letter
+ 3, note 8).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23 See Letter 5, note 10
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24 Lady Jane Hyde, the elder daughter of Henry Hyde, Earl of Rochester
+ (see Letter 5, note 11), married William Capel, third Earl of Essex. Her
+ daughter Charlotte's husband, the son of the Earl of Jersey, was created
+ Earl of Clarendon in 1776. Lady Jane's younger sister, Catherine, who
+ became the famous Duchess of Queensberry, Gay's patroness, is represented
+ by Prior, in The Female Phaeton, as jealous, when a young girl, of her
+ sister, "Lady Jenny," who went to balls, and "brought home hearts by
+ dozens."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25 See Letter 3, note 2.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26 John Holles, Duke of Newcastle, had held the Privy Seal from 1705, and
+ was regarded by the Ministers as a possible plenipotentiary in the event
+ of their negotiations for a peace being successful. He married Lady
+ Margaret Cavendish, daughter and co-heiress of Henry Cavendish, second
+ Duke of Newcastle, and was one of the richest nobles in England. His
+ death, on July 15, 1711, was the result of a fall while stag-hunting. The
+ Duke's only daughter married, in 1713, Edward, Lord Harley, the Earl of
+ Oxford's son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0088" id="link2H_4_0088">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 27.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ 1 Alexander Forbes, fourth Lord Forbes, who was afterwards attainted for
+ his share in the Rebellion of 1745.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2 Obscure (cf. Letter 7, note 30).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 Jacob Tonson the elder, who died in 1736, outlived his nephew, Jacob
+ Tonson the younger, by a few months. The elder Tonson, the secretary of
+ the Kit-Cat Club, published many of Dryden's works, and the firm continued
+ to be the chief publishers of the time during the greater part of the
+ eighteenth century.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 John Barber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 By his will Swift left to Deane Swift his "large silver standish,
+ consisting of a large silver plate, an ink-pot, and a sand-box."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 I.e., we are only three hours in getting there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 Cf. Letter 15, note 9.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 The Examiner was revived in December 1711, under Oldisworth's
+ editorship, and was continued by him until 1714.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 James Douglas, fourth Duke of Hamilton, was created Duke of Brandon in
+ the English peerage in September 1711, and was killed by Lord Mohun in a
+ duel in 1712. Swift calls him "a worthy good-natured person, very
+ generous, but of a middle understanding." He married, in 1698, as his
+ second wife, Elizabeth, daughter and heiress of Digby, Lord Gerard, a lady
+ to whom Swift often refers in the Journal. She outlived the Duke
+ thirty-two years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 See August 27th, 1711.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 William Fitzmaurice (see Letter 11, note 19).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 The Duke of Shrewsbury (see Letter 3, note 32) married an Italian lady,
+ Adelhida, daughter of the Marquis of Paliotti, of Bologna, descended
+ maternally from Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester, Queen Elizabeth's
+ favourite. Lady Cowper (Diary, pp. 8, 9) says that the Duchess "had a
+ wonderful art of entertaining and diverting people, though she would
+ sometimes exceed the bounds of decency;... but then, with all her prate
+ and noise, she was the most cunning, designing woman alive, obliging to
+ people in prosperity, and a great party-woman." As regards the name
+ "Presto," see Letter 2, note 11.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 Probably a cousin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 Presumptuous: claiming much.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 See Letter 13, note 15. John Winchcombe, a weaver of Newbury, marched
+ with a hundred of his workmen, at his own expenses, against the Scots in
+ 1513.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 Thomas Coke, M.P., of Derbyshire, was appointed a Teller of the
+ Exchequer in 1704, and Vice-Chamberlain to the Queen in 1706. In 1706 he
+ married&mdash;as his second wife&mdash;Mrs. Hale, one of the maids of
+ honour (Luttrell, v. 411, 423; vi. 113, 462; Lady Cowper's Diary, 15, 16),
+ a lady whose "piercing" beauty it was, apparently, that Steele described
+ under the name of Chloe, in No. 4 of the Tatler. Jervas painted her as a
+ country girl, "with a liveliness that shows she is conscious, but not
+ affected, of her perfections." Coke was the Sir Plume of Pope's Rape of
+ the Lock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 The committee of management of the Royal household.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 Francesca Margherita de l'Epine, the famous singer, and principal rival
+ of Mrs. Tofts, came to England in 1692, and constantly sang in opera until
+ her retirement in 1718, when she married Dr. Pepusch. She died in 1746.
+ Her sister, Maria Gallia, also a singer, did not attain the same
+ popularity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 Charles Scarborow and Sir William Foster were the Clerks of the Board
+ of Green Cloth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20 See Letter 27, note 16 on Thomas Coke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21 The Earl of Sunderland's second wife, Lady Anne Churchill, who died in
+ 1716, aged twenty-eight. She was the favourite daughter of the Duke of
+ Marlborough, and was called "the little Whig." Verses were written in
+ honour of her beauty and talent by Charles Montagu, Earl of Halifax, Dr.
+ Watts and others, and her portrait was painted by Lely and Kneller.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22 Mary, daughter of Sir William Forester, of Dothill, Shropshire. In
+ 1700, at the age of thirteen, she had been secretly married to her cousin,
+ George Downing, a lad of fifteen. Three years later, Downing, on his
+ return from abroad, refused to acknowledge his wife, and in 1715 both
+ parties petitioned the House of Lords for leave to bring in a Bill
+ declaring the marriage to be void; but leave was refused (Lords' Journals,
+ xx. 41, 45). Downing had become Sir George Downing, Bart., in 1711, and
+ had been elected M.P. for Dunwich; he died without issue in 1749, and was
+ the founder of Downing College, Cambridge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23 In a discussion upon what would be the result if beards became the
+ fashion, Budgell (Spectator, No. 331) says, "Besides, we are not certain
+ that the ladies would not come into the mode, when they take the air on
+ horseback. They already appear in hats and feathers, coats and periwigs."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0089" id="link2H_4_0089">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 28.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ 1 Horse-racing was much encouraged by Charles II., who, as Strutt tells
+ us, appointed races to be made in Datchet Mead, when he was residing at
+ Windsor. By Queen Anne's time horse-racing was becoming a regular
+ institution: see Spectator, No. 173.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2 John Montagu, second Duke of Montagu, married Lady Mary Churchill,
+ youngest daughter of the Duke of Marlborough.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 Of Clogher.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 John Adams, Prebendary of Canterbury and Canon of Windsor. He was made
+ Provost of King's College, Cambridge, in 1712, and died in 1720.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 The Hon. and Rev. George Verney, Canon of Windsor (died 1728), became
+ fourth Lord Willoughby de Broke on the death of his father (Sir Richard
+ Verney, the third Baron), in July 1711. Lord Willoughby became Dean of
+ Windsor in 1713.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 Thomas Hare, Under Secretary of State in Bolingbroke's office.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 Richard Sutton was the second son of Robert Sutton, the nephew of the
+ Robert Sutton who was created Viscount Lexington by Charles I. Sutton
+ served under William III. and Marlborough in Flanders, and was made a
+ Brigadier-General in 1710, in which year also he was elected M.P. for
+ Newark. In 1711 he was appointed Governor of Hull, and he died, a
+ Lieutenant-General, in 1737 (Dalton's Army Lists, iii. 153)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 Charles Seymour, sixth Duke of Somerset (1662-1748), known as "the proud
+ Duke of Somerset." Through the influence which his wife&mdash;afterwards
+ Mistress of the Robes (see Letter 17, note 10)&mdash;had obtained over the
+ Queen, he bore no small part in bringing about the changes of 1710. His
+ intrigues during this period were, however, mainly actuated by jealousy of
+ Marlborough, and he had really no sympathies with the Tories. His
+ intrigues with the Whigs caused the utmost alarm to St. John and to Swift.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 The third and last reference to Vanessa in the Journal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 "Pray God preserve her life, which is of great importance" (Swift to
+ Archbishop King, Aug. 15, 1711). St. John was at this moment very anxious
+ to conciliate Mrs. Masham, as he felt that she was the only person capable
+ of counteracting the intrigues of the Duchess of Somerset with the Queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 Pontack, of Abchurch Lane, son of Arnaud de Pontac, President of the
+ Parliament of Bordeaux, was proprietor of the most fashionable
+ eating-house in London. There the Royal Society met annually at dinner
+ until 1746. Several writers speak of the dinners at a guinea a head and
+ upwards served at Pontack's, and Swift comments on the price of the wine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 "His name was Read" (Scott).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 Up to the end of 1709 the warrants for the payment of the works at
+ Blenheim had been regularly issued by Godolphin and paid at the Treasury;
+ over 200,000 pounds was expended in this manner. But after the dismissal
+ of the Whigs the Queen drew tight the purse-strings. The 20,000 pounds
+ mentioned by Swift was paid in 1711, but on June 1, 1712, Anne gave
+ positive orders that nothing further should be allowed for Blenheim,
+ though 12,000 pounds remained due to the contractors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 The piercing of the lines before Bouchain, which Villars had declared
+ to be the non plus ultra of the Allies, one of the most striking proofs of
+ Marlborough's military genius.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 See Letter 22, note 15.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 A fashionable gaming-house in St. James's Street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 See Letter 6, note 15. The Grange, near Alresford, Hampshire, was
+ Henley's seat. His wife (see Letter 12, note 24) was the daughter of
+ Peregrine Bertie, son of Montagu Bertie, second Earl of Lindsey; and Earl
+ Poulett (see Letter 20, note 7) married Bridget, an elder daughter of
+ Bertie's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 William Henry Hyde, Earl of Danby, grandson of the first Duke of Leeds
+ (see Letter 8, note 22), and eldest son of Peregrine Osborne, Baron
+ Osborne and Viscount Dunblane, who succeeded to the dukedom in 1712. Owing
+ to this young man's death (at the age of twenty-one), his brother,
+ Peregrine Hyde, Marquis of Caermarthen, who married Harley's daughter
+ Elizabeth, afterwards became third Duke of Leeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 See Letter 8, note 2.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20 See Letter 3, note 7.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21 William Gregg was a clerk in Harley's office when the latter was
+ Secretary of State under the Whig Administration. In 1707-8 he was in
+ treasonable correspondence with M. de Chamillart, the French Secretary of
+ State. When he was detected he was tried for high treason, and hanged on
+ April 28. The Lords who examined Gregg did their utmost to establish
+ Harley's complicity, which Gregg, however, with his dying breath solemnly
+ denied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22 By Swift himself. The title was, Some Remarks upon a Pamphlet entitled,
+ A Letter to the Seven Lords of the Committee appointed to examine Gregg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23 See Letter 13, note 10. There is no copy in the British Museum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24 Thomas Parnell, the poet, married, in 1706, Anne, daughter of Thomas
+ Minchin, of Tipperary. In 1711 Parnell was thirty-two years of age, and
+ was Archdeacon of Clogher and Vicar of Clontibret. Swift took much trouble
+ to obtain for Parnell the friendship of Bolingbroke and other persons of
+ note, and Parnell became a member of the Scriblerus Club. In 1716 he was
+ made Vicar of Finglas, and after his death in 1718 Pope prepared an
+ edition of his poems. The fits of depression to which Parnell was liable
+ became more marked after his wife's death, and he seems to have to some
+ extent given way to drink. His sincerity and charm of manner made him
+ welcome with men of both parties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25 Dr. Henry Compton had been Bishop of London since 1675. He was
+ dangerously ill early in 1711, but he lived until 1713, when he was
+ eighty-one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26 See Letter 26, note 10.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27 See Letter 7, note 21.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28 L'Estrange speaks of "a whiffling fop" and Swift says, "Every whiffler
+ in a laced coat, who frequents the chocolate-house, shall talk of the
+ Constitution."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29 Prior's first visit to France with a view to the secret negotiations
+ with that country which the Ministers were now bent on carrying through,
+ had been made in July, when he and Gaultier reached Calais in a
+ fishing-boat and proceeded to Fontainbleau under assumed names. He
+ returned to England in August, but was recognised at Dover, whence the
+ news spread all over London, to the great annoyance of the Ministers. The
+ officer who recognised Prior was John Macky, reputed author of those
+ Characters upon which Swift wrote comments. Formerly a secret service
+ agent under William III., Macky had been given the direction of the Ostend
+ mail packets by Marlborough, to whom he communicated the news of Prior's
+ journey. Bolingbroke threatened to hang Macky, and he was thrown into
+ prison; but the accession of George I. again brought him favour and
+ employment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30 See Letter 12, note 7.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0090" id="link2H_4_0090">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 29.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ 1 See Letter 3, note 4.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ 2 See Letter 6, note 4.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 Edward Villiers (1656-1711), created Viscount Villiers in 1691, was made
+ Earl of Jersey in 1697. Under William III. he was Lord Chamberlain and
+ Secretary of State, but he was dismissed from office in 1704. When he died
+ he had been nominated as a plenipotentiary at the Congress of Utrecht, and
+ was about to receive the appointment of Lord Privy Seal. Lord Jersey
+ married, in 1681, when she was eighteen, Barbara, daughter of William
+ Chiffinch, closet-keeper to Charles II.; she died in 1735.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 Lord Paisley was the Earl of Abercorn's eldest surviving son (see Letter
+ 17, note 7).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 The Hon. John Hamilton, the Earl's second surviving son, died in 1714.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 Dr. John Robinson (1650-1723) had gone out as chaplain to the Embassy at
+ the Court of Sweden in 1682, and had returned in 1708 with the double
+ reputation of being a thorough Churchman and a sound diplomatist. He was
+ soon made Dean of Windsor, and afterwards Bishop of Bristol. He was now
+ introduced to the Council Board, and it was made known to those in the
+ confidence of Ministers that he would be one of the English
+ plenipotentiaries at the coming Peace Congress. In 1713 Dr. Robinson was
+ made Bishop of London.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 John Erskine, Earl of Mar (1675-1732), who was attainted for his part in
+ the Rebellion of 1715. His first wife, Lady Margaret Hay, was a daughter
+ of Lord Kinnoull.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 Thomas Hay, sixth Earl of Kinnoull (died 1719), a Commissioner for the
+ Treaty of Union between England and Scotland, and one of the Scotch
+ representative peers in the first Parliament of Great Britain. His son and
+ heir, Viscount Dupplin, afterwards Baron Hay (see Letter 5, note 34), who
+ married Harley's daughter Abigail, is often mentioned in the Journal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 See Letter 3, note 5.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 The title of the pamphlet was, "A New Journey to Paris, together with
+ some Secret Transactions between the French King and an English Gentleman.
+ By the Sieur du Baudrier. Translated from the French."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 See Letter 11, note 44.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 See Letter 28, note 6.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 The Earl of Strafford (see Letter 18, note 3) married, on Sept. 6,
+ 1711, Anne, only daughter and heiress of Sir Henry Johnson, of Bradenham,
+ Buckinghamshire, a wealthy shipbuilder. Many of Lady Strafford's letters
+ to her husband are given in the Wentworth Papers, 1883.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 Samuel Pratt, who was also Clerk of the Closet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 Alice Hill, woman of the bed-chamber to the Queen, died in 1762.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 Enniscorthy, the name of a town in the county of Wexford.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 Scrambling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 "These words in italics are written in strange, misshapen letters,
+ inclining to the right hand, in imitation of Stella's writing" (Deane
+ Swift). (Italics replaced by capitals for the transcription of this
+ etext.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 Senior Fellow of Trinity College, Dublin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20 John Pooley, appointed Bishop of Raphoe in 1702.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21 These words in italics are miserably scrawled, in imitation of Stella's
+ hand (Deane Swift). (Italics replaced by capitals for the transcription of
+ this etext.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22 See Letter 8, note 2.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0091" id="link2H_4_0091">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 30.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ 1 See Letter 25, note 1.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ 2 See Letter 9, note 22.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 See Letter 29, note 10.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 Cf. the entry on the 11th (note 3 above).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 See Letter 6, note 4.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 William, Lord Villiers, second Earl of Jersey (died 1721), a strong
+ Jacobite, had been M.P. for Kent before his father's death. He married, in
+ 1704, Judith, only daughter of a City merchant, Frederick Herne, son of
+ Sir Nathaniel Herne, Alderman; she died in 1735. Lord Jersey, one of "the
+ prettiest young peers in England," was a companion of Bolingbroke, and
+ stories in the Wentworth Papers (pp. 149, 230, 395, 445), show that he had
+ a bad reputation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 See Letter 28, note 4.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 The name of Arbuthnot's wife is not known: she died in 1730.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 James Lovet, one of the "Yeomen Porters" at Court.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 Richard Jones, Earl of Ranelagh, who died without male issue in January
+ 1712. Writing to Archbishop King on Jan. 8, Swift said, "Lord Ranelagh
+ died on Sunday morning; he was very poor and needy, and could hardly
+ support himself for want of a pension which used to be paid him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 Arabella Churchill, maid of honour to the Duchess of York, and mistress
+ of James II., afterwards married Colonel Charles Godfrey, Clerk
+ Comptroller of the Green Cloth and Master of the Jewel Office. Her second
+ son by James II. was created Duke of Albemarle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 See Letter 28, note 4.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 The Lord Mayor and Sheriffs of Dublin, elected in August 1711, "not
+ being approved of by the Government, the City was obliged to proceed to
+ another election, which occasioned a great ferment among the vulgar sort"
+ (Boyer, Political State, 1711, p. 500). After two other persons had been
+ elected and disapproved of, Alderman Gore was elected Lord Mayor, and
+ approved (ib. pp. 612-17).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 "These words in italics are written enormously large" (Deane Swift).
+ (Italics replaced by capitals for the transcription of this etext.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 See Letter 3, note 39.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 Henry Lowman, First Clerk of the Kitchen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 "The Doctor was always a bad reckoner, either of money or anything
+ else; and this is one of his rapid computations. For, as Stella was seven
+ days in journey, although Dr. Swift says only six, she might well have
+ spent four days at Inish-Corthy, and two nights at Mrs. Proby's mother's,
+ the distance from Wexford to Dublin being but two easy days' journey"
+ (Deane Swift).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 Mrs. Fenton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0092" id="link2H_4_0092">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 31.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ 1 See Letter 10, note 31.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ 2 Charles Paulet, second Duke of Bolton, was appointed Lord Lieutenant of
+ Ireland in 1717, and died in 1722. In a note on Macky's character of the
+ Duke, Swift calls him "a great booby"; and Lady Cowper (Diary, p. 154)
+ says that he was generally to be seen with his tongue lolling out of his
+ mouth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 Stella's maid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 See Letter 12, note 7.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 Colonel Fielding (see Letter 16, note 21).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 The envoys were Menager and the Abbe du Bois; the priest was the Abbe
+ Gaultier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 See Letter 18, note 3.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 Sir Theophilus Oglethorpe, General, who died in 1702, married Eleanor,
+ daughter of Richard Wall, of Rogane, Tipperary. She died in 1732, and
+ Swift described her as so "cunning a devil that she had great influence as
+ a reconciler of the differences at Court." One of her sons was General
+ James Oglethorpe, the philanthropist, and friend of Dr. Johnson.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 "Worrit," trouble, tease.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 Sir John Walter, Bart. (died 1722), was M.P. for the city of Oxford. He
+ and Charles Godfrey (see Letter 30, note 11) were the Clerks Comptrollers
+ of the Green Cloth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 See Letter 17, note 3.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 No doubt one of the daughters of Mervyn Tuchet, fourth Earl of
+ Castlehaven, who died in 1686.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 Henrietta Maria, daughter of Charles Scarborow (see Letter 27, note
+ 19). She married, in 1712, Sir Robert Jenkinson, Bart., M.P. for
+ Oxfordshire, who died without issue in 1717. See Wentworth Papers, 244.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 In July 1712 a Commission passed empowering Conyers Darcy and George
+ Fielding (an equerry to the Queen) to execute the office of Master of the
+ Horse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 At Killibride, about four miles from Trim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 Swift's "mistress," Lady Hyde (see Letter 5, note 11), whose husband
+ had become Earl of Rochester in May 1711. She was forty-one in 1711.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 See Sept. 19, 1711.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 See Letter 29, note 14.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 See Letter 22, note 3.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20 See Letter 27, note 9.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21 See Letter 26, note 10.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22 "This happens to be the only single line written upon the margin of any
+ of his journals. By some accident there was a margin about as broad as the
+ back of a razor, and therefore he made this use of it" (Deane Swift).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0093" id="link2H_4_0093">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 32.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ 1 Lieutenant-Colonel Barton, of Colonel Kane's regiment.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ 2 A nickname for the High Church party.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 See Letter 29, note 10.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 "From this pleasantry of my Lord Oxford, the appellative Martinus
+ Scriblerus took its rise" (Deane Swift).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 Cf. the Imitation of the Sixth Satire of the Second Book of Horace,
+ 1714, where Swift says that, during their drives together, Harley would
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "gravely try to read the lines
+ Writ underneath the country signs."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ 6 See Letter 23, note 15.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 See Letter 18, note 4.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 See Letter 23, note 17.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 Lord Pembroke (see Letter 7, note 31) married, in 1708, as his second
+ wife, Barbara, Dowager Baroness Arundell of Trerice, formerly widow of Sir
+ Richard Mauleverer, and daughter of Sir Thomas Slingsby. She died in 1722.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 Caleb Coatesworth, who died in 1741, leaving a large fortune.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 Abel Boyer, Whig journalist and historian, attacked Swift in his
+ pamphlet, An Account of the State and Progress of the Present Negotiations
+ for Peace. Boyer says that he was released from custody by Harley; and in
+ the Political State for 1711 (p. 646) he speaks of Swift as "a shameless
+ and most contemptible ecclesiastical turncoat, whose tongue is as swift to
+ revile as his mind is swift to change." The Postboy said that Boyer would
+ "be prosecuted with the utmost severity of the law" for this attack.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 The "Edgar." Four hundred men were killed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 William Bretton, or Britton, was made Lieutenant-Colonel in 1702,
+ Colonel of a new Regiment of Foot 1705, Brigadier-General 1710, and
+ Colonel of the King's Own Borderers in April 1711 (Dalton, Army Lists,
+ iii. 238). In December 1711 he was appointed Envoy Extraordinary to the
+ King of Prussia (Postboy, Jan. 1, 1712), and he died in December 1714 or
+ January 1715.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 See Letter 24, note 14.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 It is not clear which of several Lady Gores is here referred to. It may
+ be (1) the wife of Sir William Gore, Bart., of Manor Gore, and Custos
+ Rotulorum, County Leitrim, who married Hannah, eldest daughter and co-heir
+ of James Hamilton, Esq., son of Sir Frederick Hamilton, and niece of
+ Gustavus Hamilton, created Viscount Boyne. She died 1733. Or (2) the wife
+ of Sir Ralph Gore, Bart. (died 1732), M.P. for County Donegal, and
+ afterwards Speaker of the Irish House of Commons. He married Miss
+ Colville, daughter of Sir Robert Colville, of Newtown, Leitrim, and, as
+ his second wife, Elizabeth, only daughter of Dr. Ashe, Bishop of Clogher.
+ Or (3) the wife of Sir Arthur Gore, Bart. (died 1727), of Newtown Gore,
+ Mayo, who married Eleanor, daughter of Sir George St. George, Bart., of
+ Carrick, Leitrim, and was ancestor of the Earls of Arran.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 "Modern usage has sanctioned Stella's spelling" (Scott). Swift's
+ spelling was "wast."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 Mrs. Manley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 Swift's own lines, "Mrs. Frances Harris's Petition."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 Thomas Coote was a justice of the Court of Queen's Bench, in Ireland,
+ from 1692 until his removal in 1715.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20 Probably a relative of Robert Echlin, Dean of Tuam, who was killed by
+ some of his own servants in April 1712, at the age of seventy-three. His
+ son John became Prebendary and Vicar-General of Tuam, and died in 1764,
+ aged eighty-three. In August 1731 Bolingbroke sent Swift a letter by the
+ hands of "Mr. Echlin," who would, he said, tell Swift of the general state
+ of things in England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21 "This column of words, as they are corrected, is in Stella's hand"
+ (Deane Swift).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0094" id="link2H_4_0094">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 33.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ 1 Swift's verses, "The Description of a Salamander," are a scurrilous
+ attack on John, Lord Cutts (died 1707), who was famous for his bravery.
+ Joanna Cutts, the sister who complained of Swift's abuse, died unmarried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2 See Letter 6, note 5.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 Fourteen printers or publishers were arrested, under warrants signed by
+ St. John, for publishing pamphlets directed against the Government. They
+ appeared at the Court of Queens Bench on Oct. 23, and were continued on
+ their own recognisances till the end of the term.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 Robert Benson (see Letter 6, note 36).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 "The South Sea Whim," printed in Scott's Swift, ii. 398.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 See Letter 21, Apr. 24, 1711, Letter 22, Apr. 28, 1711, and Letter 34,
+ 17 Nov. 1711.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 Count Gallas was dismissed with a message that he might depart from the
+ kingdom when he thought fit. He published the preliminaries of peace in
+ the Daily Courant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 William, second Viscount Hatton, who died without issue in 1760. His
+ half-sister Anne married Daniel Finch, second Earl of Nottingham, and Lord
+ Hatton was therefore uncle to his fellow-guest, Mr. Finch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 Crinkle or contract. Gay writes: "Showers soon drench the camblet's
+ cockled grain."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 The Countess of Jersey (see Letter 30, note 6), like her husband, was a
+ friend of Bolingbroke's. Lady Strafford speaks of her having lately
+ (November 1711) "been in pickle for her sins," at which she was not
+ surprised. Before the Earl succeeded to the title, Lady Wentworth wrote to
+ her son: "It's said Lord Villors Lady was worth fower scoar thoussand pd;
+ you might have got her, as wel as Lord Villors.... He (Lord Jersey) has
+ not don well by his son, the young lady is not yoused well as I hear
+ amongst them, which in my openion is not well." Wentworth Papers (pp. 214,
+ 234).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 Cf. Letter 9, Nov. 11, 1710, and Letter 9, note 3.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 Charles Crow, appointed Bishop of Cloyne in 1702.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 Swift.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 Mrs. Manley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 The titles of these pamphlets are as follows: (1) A True Narrative of..
+ . the Examination of the Marquis de Guiscard; (2) Some Remarks upon a
+ Pamphlet entitled, A Letter to the Seven Lords; (3) A New Journey to
+ Paris; (4) The Duke of Marlborough's Vindication; (5) A Learned Comment on
+ Dr. Hare's Sermon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 See the pun this day above.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0095" id="link2H_4_0095">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 34.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ 1 See Letter 3, note 17.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ 2 See Letter 11, note 44.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 Pratt (see Letter 2, note 14).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 Stella and Dingley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 "Noah's Dove, an Exhortation to Peace, set forth in a Sermon preached on
+ the Seventh of November, 1710, a Thanksgiving Day, by Thomas Swift, A.M.,
+ formerly Chaplain to Sir William Temple, now Rector of Puttenham in
+ Surrey." Thomas Swift was Swift's "little parson cousin" (see Letter 24,
+ note 2).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 See Letter 6, note 11. The book referred to is, apparently, An Impartial
+ Enquiry into the Management of the War in Spain, post-dated 1712.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 Lord Harley (afterwards second Earl of Oxford) (see Letter 5, note 35)
+ married, on Oct. 31, 1713, Lady Henrietta Cavendish Holles, only daughter
+ of John Holles, last Duke of Newcastle of that family (see Letter 26, note
+ 26).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 Bolingbroke afterwards said that the great aim (at length accomplished)
+ of Harley's administration was to marry his son to this young lady. Swift
+ wrote a poetical address to Lord Harley on his marriage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 Thomas Pelham, first Baron Pelham, married, as his second wife, Lady
+ Grace Holles, daughter of the Earl of Clare and sister of the Duke of
+ Newcastle. Their eldest son, Thomas, who succeeded to the barony in 1712,
+ was afterwards created Earl of Clare and Duke of Newcastle,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 Francis Higgins, Rector of Baldruddery, called "the Sacheverell of
+ Ireland," was an extreme High Churchman, who had been charged with
+ sedition on account of sermons preached in London in 1707. In 1711 he was
+ again prosecuted as "a disloyal subject and disturber of the public
+ peace." At that time he was Prebendary of Christ Church, Dublin; in 1725
+ he was made Archdeacon of Cashel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 Swift's pamphlet, The Conduct of the Allies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 Lord Oxford's daughter Abigail married, in 1709, Viscount Dupplin,
+ afterwards seventh Earl of Kinnoull (see Letter 5, note 34). She died in
+ 1750, and her husband in 1758, when the eldest son, Thomas, became Earl.
+ The second son, Robert, was made Archbishop of York in 1761.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 Kensington Gravel Pits was then a famous health resort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 Draggled. Pope has, "A puppy, daggled through the town."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 Writing of Peperharrow, Manning and Bray state (Surrey, ii. 32, 47)
+ that Oxenford Grange was conveyed to Philip Froud (died 1736) in 1700, and
+ was sold by him in 1713 to Alan Broderick, afterwards Viscount Midleton.
+ This Froud (Swift's "old Frowde") had been Deputy Postmaster-General; he
+ was son of Sir Philip Frowde, who was knighted in 1665 (Le Neve's Knights,
+ Harleian Society, p. 190), and his son Philip was Addison's friend (see
+ Letter 8, note 13).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 Probably the Charles Child, Esq., of Farnham, whose death is recorded
+ in the Gentleman's Magazine for 1754.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 Grace Spencer was probably Mrs. Proby's sister (see Letter 19, note 3).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 Cf. Shakespeare, As You Like It, v. 3: "Shall we clap into 't roundly,
+ without hawking or spitting, which are the only prologues to a bad voice?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 In the "Verses on his own Death," 1731, Swift says
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "When daily howd'y's come of course,
+ And servants answer, 'Worse and worse!'"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Cf. Steele (Tatler, No. 109),
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "After so many howdies, you proceed to visit or not, as you like the run
+ of each other's reputation or fortune,"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ and (Spectator, No. 143),
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "the howd'ye servants of our women."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0096" id="link2H_4_0096">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 35.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ 1 See Letter 31, note 8.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ 2 See Letter 14, note 9.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 The Tories alleged that the Duke of Marlborough, the Duke of Montagu,
+ Steele, etc., were to take part in the procession (cf. Spectator, No.
+ 269). Swift admits that the images seized were worth less than 40 pounds,
+ and not 1000 pounds, as he had said, and that the Devil was not like
+ Harley; yet he employed someone to write a lying pamphlet, A True Relation
+ of the Several Facts and Circumstances of the Intended Riot and Tumult,
+ etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 A brother of Jemmy Leigh (see Letter 2, note 16), and one of Stella's
+ card-playing acquaintances.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 Of The Conduct of the Allies (see Letter 34, Nov. 10, 1711, and Letter
+ 35, Nov. 24, 1711).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 Sir Thomas Hanmer (see Letter 9, note 13) married, in 1698, Isabella,
+ widow of the first Duke of Grafton, and only daughter and heiress of
+ Henry, Earl of Arlington. She died in 1723.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 James, Duke of Hamilton (see Letter 27, note 9), married, in 1698, as
+ his second wife, Elizabeth, daughter and sole heir of Digby, Lord Gerard.
+ She died in 1744.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 The Conduct of the Allies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 See Letter 25, note 6.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 Sir Matthew Dudley (see Letter 3, note 2) married Lady Mary O'Bryen,
+ youngest daughter of Henry, Earl of Thomond.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 See Letter 31, note 10.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 Sir John St. Leger (died 1743) was M.P. for Doneraile and a Baron of
+ the Exchequer in Ireland from 1714 to 1741. His elder brother, Arthur, was
+ created Viscount Doneraile in 1703.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 "Relation of the Facts and Circumstances of the Intended Riot on Queen
+ Elizabeth's Birthday."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 The Conduct of the Allies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 See Letter 9, note 18.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 The first motto was "Partem tibi Gallia nostri eripuit," etc. (Horace,
+ 2 Od. 17-24).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 See Plautus's Amphitrus, or Dryden's Amphitryon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 It is not known whether or no this was Dr. William Savage, Master of
+ Emmanuel College, Cambridge. No copy of the sermon&mdash;if it was printed&mdash;has
+ been found. See Courtenay's Memoirs of Sir William Temple.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 Of The Conduct of the Allies, a pamphlet which had a very wide
+ circulation. See a paper by Edward Solly in the Antiquarian Magazine,
+ March 1885.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20 Allen Bathurst, M.P. (1684-1775), created Baron Bathurst in December
+ 1711, and Earl Bathurst in 1772. His second and eldest surviving son was
+ appointed Lord Chancellor in the year preceding the father's death.
+ Writing to her son in January 1711 (Wentworth Papers, 173), Lady Wentworth
+ said of Bathurst, "He is, next to you, the finest gentleman and the best
+ young man I know; I love him dearly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21 See Letter 9, note 17.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22 See Letter 16, note 20.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23 Swift is alluding to the quarrel between Lord Santry (see Letter 23,
+ note 2) and Francis Higgins (see Letter 34, note 10), which led to
+ Higgins's prosecution. The matter is described at length in Boyer s
+ Political State, 1711, pp. 617 seq.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24 See Letter 19, note 1.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25 No doubt the same as Colonel Newburgh (see Journal, March 5, 1711-12).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26 Beaumont (see Letter 1, note 2 and Letter 26, Jul. 6, 1711).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27 See Letter 31, note 1.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28 Cf. Letter 15, Feb. 9, 1710-11.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29 See Letter 35, note 3.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0097" id="link2H_4_0097">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 36.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ 1 See Letter 34, note 15. Debtors could not be arrested on Sunday.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ 2 Sir George Pretyman, Bart., dissipated the fortune of the family. The
+ title became dormant in 1749.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 See the Introduction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 For the Whites of Farnham, see Manning and Bray's Surrey, iii. 177.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 The Conduct of the Allies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 The Percevals were among Swift's principal friends in the neighbourhood
+ of Laracor. In a letter to John Temple in 1706 (Forster's Life of Swift,
+ 182) Swift alludes to Perceval; in spite of different views in politics,
+ "I always loved him," says Swift, "very well as a man of very good
+ understanding and humour." Perceval was related to Sir John Perceval,
+ afterwards Earl of Egmont (see Letter 18, note 15).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 See Letter 1, note 12.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 See Letter 8, note 14.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 The Examiner was resumed on Dec. 6, 1711, under Oldisworth's editorship,
+ and was continued by him until July 1714.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 Daniel Finch, second Earl of Nottingham, a staunch Tory, had quarrelled
+ with the Government and the Court. On Dec. 7, 1711, he carried, by six
+ votes, an amendment to the Address, to the effect that no peace would be
+ acceptable which left Spain in the possession of the House of Bourbon.
+ Harley's counter-stroke was the creation of twelve new peers. The Whigs
+ rewarded Nottingham by withdrawing their opposition to the Occasional
+ Conformity Bill:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 This "Song" begins:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "An orator dismal of Nottinghamshire,
+ Who had forty years let out his conscience for hire."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ 12 The Conduct of the Allies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 Robert Bertie, Lord Willoughby de Eresby, and fourth Earl of Lindsey,
+ was created Marquis of Lindsay in 1706, and Duke of Ancaster and Kesteven
+ in 1715. He died in 1723.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 Lady Sunderland (see Letter 27, note 21) and Lady Rialton, ladies of
+ the bed-chamber to the Queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 Hugh Cholmondeley (died 1724), the second Viscount, was created
+ Viscount Malpas and Earl of Cholmondeley in 1706, and in 1708 was
+ appointed Treasurer of Her Majesty's Household, an office which he held
+ until 1713, in spite of his Whig sympathies. "Good for nothing, so far as
+ ever I knew," Swift wrote of him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 Prov. xxv. 3.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 See Letter 31, note 8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 Thomas Parker, afterwards created Earl of Macclesfield, was appointed
+ Lord Chief-Justice in March 1710. In September 1711 he declined Harley's
+ offer of the Lord Chancellorship, a post which he accepted under a Whig
+ Government in the next reign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 The Bill against Occasional Conformity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0098" id="link2H_4_0098">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 37.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ 1 The proposed visit to London of Prince Eugene of Savoy, the renowned
+ General, and friend of Marlborough, was viewed by the Government with
+ considerable alarm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2 Swift's "An excellent new Song; being the intended Speech of a famous
+ orator against Peace," a ballad "two degrees above Grub Street" (see
+ Letter 36, note 11).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 Robert Walpole was then M.P. for King's Lynn, and Leader of the
+ Opposition in the House of Commons. He had been Secretary at War from
+ February 1708 to September 1710, and the Commissioners of Public Accounts
+ having reported, on Dec. 21, 1711, that he had been guilty of venality and
+ corruption, he was expelled from the House of Commons, and taken to the
+ Tower.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 William King, D.C.L., author of the Journey to London in 1698, Dialogues
+ of the Dead, The Art of Cookery, and other amusing works, was, at the end
+ of the month, appointed Gazetteer, in succession to Steele, on Swift's
+ recommendation. Writing earlier in the year, Gay said that King deserved
+ better than to "languish out the small remainder of his life in the Fleet
+ Prison." The duties of Gazetteer were too much for his easy-going nature
+ and failing health, and he resigned the post in July 1712. He died in the
+ following December.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 At the bottom of St. James's Street, on the west side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 The Rev. John Shower, pastor of the Presbyterian Congregation at
+ Curriers' Hall, London Wall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 The Windsor Prophecy, in which the Duchess of Somerset (see Letter 17,
+ note 10) is attacked as "Carrots from Northumberland."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 Merlin's Prophecy, 1709, written in pseudo-mediaeval English.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 See Letter 3, note 18.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 Dorothy, daughter of Sir Edward Leach, of Shipley, Derbyshire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 Sir James Long, Bart. (died 1729), was at this time M.P. for
+ Chippenham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 The number containing this paragraph is not in the British Museum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 Joseph Beaumont (see Letter 1, note 2, Letter 26, Jul. 6, 1711 and
+ Letter 35, note 26)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 See Letter 4, note 13.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 Apparently a misprint for "whether."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 See Letter 32, note 19.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 James Compton, afterwards fifth Earl of Northampton (died 1754), was
+ summoned to the House of Lords as Baron Compton in December 1711. Charles
+ Bruce, who succeeded his father as third Earl of Aylesbury in 1741, was
+ created Lord Bruce, of Whorlton, at the same time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 James, Lord Compton, eldest son of the Earl of Northampton; Charles,
+ Lord Bruce, eldest son of the Earl of Aylesbury; Henry Paget, son of Lord
+ Paget; George Hay, Viscount Dupplin, the son-in-law of the Lord Treasurer,
+ created Baron Hay; Viscount Windsor, created Baron Montjoy; Sir Thomas
+ Mansel, Baron Mansel; Sir Thomas Willoughby, Baron Middleton; Sir Thomas
+ Trevor, Baron Trevor; George Granville, Baron Lansdowne; Samuel Masham,
+ Baron Masham; Thomas Foley, Baron Foley; and Allen Bathurst, Baron
+ Bathurst.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0099" id="link2H_4_0099">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 38.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ 1 Juliana, widow of the second Earl of Burlington, and daughter of the
+ Hon. Henry Noel, was Mistress of the Robes to Queen Anne. She died in
+ 1750, aged seventy-eight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2 Thomas Windsor, Viscount Windsor (died 1738), an Irish peer, who had
+ served under William III. in Flanders, was created Baron Montjoy, of the
+ Isle of Wight, in December 1711. He married Charlotte, widow of John,
+ Baron Jeffries, of Wem, and daughter of Philip Herbert, Earl of Pembroke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 The Hon. Russell Robartes, brother of Lord Radnor (see Letter 3, note
+ 7), was Teller of the Exchequer, and M.P. for Bodmin. His son became third
+ Earl of Radnor in 1723.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 Gay (Trivia, ii. 92) speaks of "the slabby pavement."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 See Letter 17, note 1.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 George Granville (see Letter 14, note 5), now Baron Lansdowne, married
+ Lady Mary Thynne, widow of Thomas Thynne, and daughter of Edward, Earl of
+ Jersey (see Letter 29, note 3). In October 1710 Lady Wentworth wrote to
+ her son, "Pray, my dear, why will you let Lady Mary Thynne go? She is
+ young, rich, and not unhandsome, some say she is pretty; and a virtuous
+ lady, and of the nobility, and why will you not try to get her?"
+ (Wentworth papers, 149).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 See Letter 24, note 4.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 Harness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 On his birthday Swift read the third chapter of Job.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 See Letter 33, note 12.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 Sir George St. George of Dunmore, Co. Galway, M.P. for Co. Leitrim from
+ 1661 to 1692, and afterwards for Co. Galway, died in December 1711.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 See Letter 35, note 11 and Letter 31, note 10.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 See Letter 4, note 16.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 Dr. Pratt (see Letter 2, note 14).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 King Henry VIII., act iv. sc. 2; "An old man broken with the storms,"
+ etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 "These words in the manuscript imitate Stella's writing, and are sloped
+ the wrong way" (Deane Swift),
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 Archibald Douglas, third Marquis of Douglas, was created Duke of
+ Douglas in 1703. He died, without issue, in 1761.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 Arbuthnot and Freind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0100" id="link2H_4_0100">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 39.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ 1 Sir Stephen Evance, goldsmith, was knighted in 1690.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ 2 Because of the refusal of the House of Lords to allow the Duke of
+ Hamilton (see Letter 27, note 9), a Scottish peer who had been raised to
+ the peerage of Great Britain as Duke of Brandon, to sit under that title.
+ The Scottish peers discontinued their attendance at the House until the
+ resolution was partially amended; and the Duke of Hamilton always sat as a
+ representative Scottish peer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 Sir William Robinson (1655-1736), created a baronet in 1689, was M.P.
+ for York from 1697 to 1722. His descendants include the late Earl De Grey
+ and the Marquis of Ripon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 See Letter 16, note 19. The full title was, Some Advice humbly offered
+ to the Members of the October Club, in a Letter from a Person of Honour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 See Letter 38, note 11.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 "It is the last of the page, and written close to the edge of the paper"
+ (Deane Swift).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 Henry Somerset, second Duke of Beaufort. In September 1711 the Duke&mdash;who
+ was then only twenty-seven&mdash;married, as his third wife, Mary,
+ youngest daughter of the Duke of Leeds. In the following January Lady
+ Strafford wrote, "The Duke and Duchess of Beaufort are the fondest of one
+ another in the world; I fear 'tis too hot to hold.... I own I fancy people
+ may love one another as well without making so great a rout" (Wentworth
+ Papers, 256). The Duke died in 1714, at the age of thirty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 "Upon the 10th and 17th of this month the Examiner was very severe upon
+ the Duke of Marlborough, and in consequence of this report pursued him
+ with greater virulence in the following course of his papers" (Deane
+ Swift).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 A term of execration. Scott (Kenilworth) has, "A pize on it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 See Letter 11, note 13.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 In a letter to Swift of Jan. 31, 1712, Sacheverell, after expressing
+ his indebtedness to St. John and Harley, said, "For yourself, good Doctor,
+ who was the first spring to move it, I can never sufficiently acknowledge
+ the obligation," and in a postscript he hinted that a place in the Custom
+ House which he heard was vacant might suit his brother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 Thomas Yalden, D.D., (1671-1736), Addison's college friend, succeeded
+ Atterbury as preacher of Bridewell Hospital in 1713. In 1723 he was
+ arrested on suspicion of being involved in the Atterbury plot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 Tablets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 Sir Solomon de Medina, a Jew, was knighted in 1700.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 Davenant had been said to be the writer of papers which Swift
+ contributed to the Examiner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 Henry Withers, a friend of "Duke" Disney (see Letter 16, note 20), was
+ appointed Lieutenant-General in 1707, and Major-General in 1712. On his
+ death in 1729 he was buried in Westminster Abbey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 See Letter 36, note 18.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 Dyer's News Letter, the favourite reading of Sir Roger de Coverley
+ (Spectator, No. 127), was the work of John Dyer, a Jacobite journalist. In
+ the Tatler (No. 18) Addison says that Dyer was "justly looked upon by all
+ the fox-hunters in the nation as the greatest statesman our country has
+ produced." Lord Chief-Justice Holt referred to the News Letter as "a
+ little scandalous paper of a scandalous author" (Howell's State Trials,
+ xiv. 1150).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Letter 40.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1 Dr. John Sharp, made Archbishop of York in 1691, was called by Swift
+ "the harmless tool of others' hate." Swift believed that Sharp, owing to
+ his dislike of The Tale of a Tub, assisted in preventing the bishopric of
+ Hereford being offered to him. Sharp was an excellent preacher, with a
+ taste for both poetry and science.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2 An edition of the Countess d'Aulnoy's Les Contes des Fees appeared in
+ 1710, in four volumes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 Francis Godolphin, Viscount Rialton, the eldest son of Sidney, Earl of
+ Godolphin, succeeded his father as second Earl on Sept. 15, 1712. He held
+ 3 various offices, including that of Lord Privy Seal (1735-1740), and died
+ in 1766, aged eighty-eight. He married, in 1698, Lady Henrietta Churchill,
+ who afterwards was Duchess of Marlborough in her own right. She died in
+ 1733.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 See Letter 26, note 24. Ladies of the bed-chamber received 1000 pounds a
+ year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 William O'Brien, third Earl of Inchiquin, succeeded his father in 1691,
+ and died in 1719.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 Lady Catherine Hyde was an unmarried daughter of Laurence Hyde, first
+ Earl of Rochester (see Letter 8, note 22). Notwithstanding Swift's express
+ statement that the lady to whom he here refers was the late Earl's
+ daughter, and the allusion to her sister, Lady Dalkeith, in Letter 60,
+ note 26, she has been confused by previous editors with her niece, Lady
+ Catherine Hyde (see Letter 26, note 24), daughter of the second Earl, and
+ afterwards Duchess of Queensberry. That lady, not long afterwards to be
+ celebrated by Prior, was a child under twelve when Swift wrote.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 Sir John Trevor (1637-1717), formerly Speaker of the House of Commons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 See Letter 11, note 44.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 See Letter 34, note 10.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 See Letter 23, note 2.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 Charles Trimnel, made Bishop of Norwich in 1708, and Bishop of
+ Winchester in 1721, was strongly opposed to High Church doctrines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 Jibe or jest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 See Letter 22, note 4.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 The treaty concluded with Holland in 1711.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 Feb. 2 is the Purification of the Virgin Mary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 See Letter 29, note 7.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 See Letter 11, note 53.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 Lady Mary Butler (see Letter 7, note 2 and Letter 3, note 40), daughter
+ of the Duke of Ormond, who married, in 1710, John, third Lord Ashburnham,
+ afterwards Earl of Ashburnham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 See Letter 2, note 5.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20 See Letter 36, note 14.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21 Scroop Egerton, fifth Earl and first Duke of Bridgewater, married, in
+ 1703, Lady Elizabeth Churchill, third daughter of the Duke of Marlborough.
+ She died in 1714, aged twenty-six.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22 See Letter 30, note 6.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23 Heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24 Edward Fowler, D.D., appointed Bishop of Gloucester in 1691, died in
+ 1714.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25 Isaac Manley (see Letter 3, note 3).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0101" id="link2H_4_0101">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 41.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ 1 This letter, the first of the series published by Hawkesworth, of which
+ we have the originals (see Preface), was addressed "To Mrs. Johnson at her
+ Lodgings over against St. Mary's Church, near Capell Street, Dublin,
+ Ireland"; and was endorsed by her "Recd. Mar. 1st."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2 See Letter 10, note 28.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 See Letter 12, note 22.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 See Letter 23, note 2.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 Charles Ross, son of the eleventh Baron Ross, was Colonel of the Royal
+ Irish Dragoons from 1695 to 1705. He was a Lieutenant-General under the
+ Duke of Ormond in Flanders, and died in 1732 (Dalton, ii. 212, iii. 34).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 Charles Paulet, Marquis of Winchester, succeeded his father (see Letter
+ 31, note 2) as third Duke of Bolton in 1722. He married, as his second
+ wife, Lavinia Fenton, the actress who took the part of Polly Peacham in
+ Gay's Beggars Opera in 1728, and he died in 1754.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 John Blith, or Bligh, son of the Right Hon. Thomas Bligh, M.P. of
+ Rathmore, Co. Meath (see Letter 4, note 22). In August 1713 he married
+ Lady Theodosia Hyde, daughter of Edward, third Earl of Clarendon. Lord
+ Berkeley of Stratton wrote, "Lady Theodosia Hyde... is married to an Irish
+ Mr. Blythe, of a good estate, who will soon have enough of her, if I can
+ give any guess" (Wentworth Papers, 353). In 1715 Bligh was made Baron
+ Clifton, of Rathmore, and Earl of Darnley in 1725. He died in 1728.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 Obliterated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 Word obliterated; probably "found." Forster reads "oors, dee MD."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 Words obliterated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 See Letter 31, note 1 and Letter 10, note 31.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 See Letter 20, Apr. 13-14, 1711 and Letter 9, note 20.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 Words obliterated. Forster reads "fourth. Euge, euge, euge."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 Words obliterated; one illegible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 See Letter 2, note 14.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 See Letter 1, note 12.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 Service.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 "Aplon"&mdash;if this is the right word&mdash;means, of course, apron&mdash;the
+ apron referred to on Letter 39, Jan. 25, 1711-12.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 Words obliterated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20 As the son of a "brother" of the Club.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21 The Archbishop, Dr. King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22 See Tacitus, Annals, book ii. Cn. Calpurnius Piso, who was said to have
+ poisoned Germanicus, was found with his throat cut.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23 This satire on Marlborough concludes&mdash; "And Midas now neglected
+ stands, With asses' ears and dirty hands."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24 Dr. Robinson, Bishop of Bristol.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25 Some Remarks on the Barrier Treaty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26 Several words are obliterated. Forster reads "MD MD, for we must always
+ write to MD MD MD, awake or asleep;" but the passage is illegible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27 See Letter 11, note 39 and Letter 61, note 5.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28 A long erasure. Forster reads "Go to bed. Help pdfr. Rove pdfr. MD MD.
+ Nite darling rogues."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29 Word obliterated. Forster reads "saucy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30 Letter from.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 31 Words partially obliterated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 32 Swift wrote by mistake, "On Europe Britain's safety lies"; the slip was
+ pointed out by Hawkesworth. All the verse is written in the MSS. as prose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 33 "Them" (MS.).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 34 See Wyons Queen Anne, ii. 366-7.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 35 A Proposal for Correcting, Improving, and Ascertaining the English
+ Tongue, in a Letter to the Most Honourable Robert, Earl of Oxford, 1712.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 36 "Help him to draw up the representation" (omitting every other letter).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 37 See Letter 23, note 13.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 38 Robert Benson.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 39 The Story of the St. Albans Ghost, 1712.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 40 "Usually" (MS.).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 41 These words are partially obliterated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 42 This sentence is obliterated. Forster reads, "Farewell, mine deelest
+ rife deelest char Ppt, MD MD MD Ppt, FW, Lele MD, ME ME ME ME aden FW MD
+ Lazy ones Lele Lele all a Lele."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0102" id="link2H_4_0102">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 42.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ 1 Endorsed by Stella "Recd. Mar. 19."
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ 2 "Would" (MS.).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 Conversation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 John Guillim's Display of Heraldrie appeared first in 1610. The edition
+ to which Swift refers was probably that of 1679, which is wrongly
+ described as the "fifth edition," instead of the seventh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 "One of the horses here mentioned may have been the celebrated Godolphin
+ Arabian from whom descends all the blue blood of the racecourse, and who
+ was the grandfather of Eclipse" (Larwood's Story of the London Parks, 99).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 See Letter 36, note 6.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 Dorothea, daughter of James Stopford, of New Hall, County Meath, and
+ sister of Lady Newtown-Butler, was the second wife of Edward, fourth Earl
+ of Meath, who died without issue in 1707. She afterwards married General
+ Richard Gorges (see Journal, April 5, 1713), of Kilbrue, County Meath, and
+ Swift wrote an epitaph on them&mdash;"Doll and Dickey."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 Here follow some obliterated words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 Barber (see Letter 12, note 6).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 "The editors supposed Zinkerman (which they printed in capitals) to
+ mean some outlandish or foreign distinction; but it is the little language
+ for 'gentleman'" (Forster).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 The Hon. Charles Butler, second son of Thomas, Earl of Ossory, eldest
+ son of James, Duke of Ormond, was elevated to the peerage of Ireland in
+ 1693 as Earl of Arran, and was also created a peer of England, as Baron
+ Butler. He held various offices under William III. and Queen Anne, and
+ died without issue in 1759.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 "They" (MS.).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 See Letter 31, Jan. 12, 1711-12 and Letter 3, note 22.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 See Letter 11, note 13.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 Sir William Wyndham, Bart., of Orchard Wyndham, married Lady Catherine
+ Seymour, daughter of the sixth Duke of Somerset (see Letter 25, note 1).
+ Their eldest son, Charles, succeeded his uncle, the Duke of Somerset, as
+ Earl of Egremont; and the second son, Percy, was afterwards created Earl
+ of Thomond. The Wyndhams' house was in Albemarle Street; the loss was over
+ 20,000 pounds; but they were "much more concerned for their servants than
+ for all the other losses" (Wentworth Papers, 274). The Duke of Ormond
+ "worked as hard as any of the ordinary men, and gave many guineas about to
+ encourage the men to work hard." The Queen gave the Wyndhams temporary
+ lodgings in "St. James's house."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 See Letter 3, note 31.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 What.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 Devil's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 "To" (MS.).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20 See Letter 35, note 25.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21 See Letter 41, note 34.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22 See Letter 12, Jan. 1, 1710-11.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23 Peregrine Hyde Osborne, Earl of Danby, afterwards Marquis of
+ Caermarthen and third Duke of Leeds (see Letter 56, note 6). His sister
+ Mary was married to the Duke of Beaufort (see Letter 39, note 7).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24 See Letter 9, note 17.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25 Several undecipherable words. Forster reads, "Pidy Pdfr, deelest
+ Sollahs."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26 "K" (MS.). It should, of course, be "Queen's."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27 See Letter 22, note 18.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0103" id="link2H_4_0103">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 43.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ 1 Addressed "To Mrs. Johnson, at her lodgings over against St. Mary's
+ Church, near Capel Street, Dublin, Ireland." Endorsed "Mar. 30."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2 See Letter 9, note 1.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+3 The Mohocks succeeded the Scowrers of William III.'s reign. Gay
+(Trivia, iii. 325) says "Who has not heard the Scowrers' midnight fame?
+ Who has not trembled at the Mohocks' name?"
+Lady Wentworth (Wentworth Papers, 277) says: "They put an old woman into
+a hogshead, and rolled her down a hill; they cut off some noses, others'
+hands, and several barbarous tricks, without any provocation. They are
+said to be young gentlemen; they never take any money from any." See
+also the Spectator, Nos. 324, 332, and 347 (where Budgell alludes to
+"the late panic fear"), and Defoe's Review for March 15, 1712. Swift was
+in considerable alarm about the Mohocks throughout March, and said that
+they were all Whigs. The reports that numbers of persons, including men
+of figure, had joined together to commit assaults in the streets, made
+many fear to leave their houses at night. A proclamation was issued for
+the suppressing of riots and the discovery of those guilty of the
+late outrages; but it seems probable that the disorders were not more
+frequent than might be expected from time to time in a great city.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ 4 Henry Davenant, son of Charles Davenant (see Letter 8, note 14), was
+ Resident at Frankfort. Macky described him as "very giddy-headed, with
+ some wit," to which Swift added, "He is not worth mentioning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 Thomas Burnet, youngest son of Gilbert Burnet, Bishop of Salisbury, was
+ at this time a young man about town of no good reputation. Afterwards he
+ turned his attention to the law, and was appointed a judge of the Court of
+ Common Pleas in 1741. He was knighted in 1745, and died in 1753.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 By Arbuthnot, written to recommend the peace proposals of the
+ Government. The full title was, Law is a Bottomless Pit. Exemplified in
+ the case of the Lord Strutt, John Bull, Nicholas Frog, and Lewis Baboon;
+ who spent all they had in a Law Suit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 See Letter 25, note 6 and Letter 41, note 35.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 Our little language.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 Forster reads, "two deelest nauty nown MD."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 See Letter 6, note 12.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 William Diaper, son of Joseph Diaper of Bridgewater, was sent to
+ Balliol College, Oxford, in 1699, at the age of fourteen. He entered the
+ Church, and was curate at Brent, Somerset; but he died in 1717, aged
+ twenty-nine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 The Examiner (vol. ii. No. 15) complained of general bribery and
+ oppression on the part of officials and underlings in the public service,
+ especially in matters connected with the army; but the writer said that
+ the head (Lord Lansdowne) was just and liberal in his nature, and easy in
+ his fortune, and a man of honour and virtue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 Sealed documents given to show that a merchant's goods are entered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 Thomas Lawrence, First Physician to Queen Anne, and Physician-General
+ to the Army, died in 1714 (Gentleman's Magazine, 1815, ii. 17). His
+ daughter Elizabeth was second wife to Lord Mohun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 See Letter 17, note 11.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 See Letter 26, note 2.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 No officer named Newcomb appears in Dalton's Army Lists; but the
+ allusion to General Ross, further on in Letter 43, adds to the probability
+ that Swift was referring to one of the sons of Sir Thomas Newcomen, Bart.,
+ who was killed at the siege of Enniskillen. Beverley Newcomen (Dalton,
+ iii. 52, iv. 60), who was probably Swift's acquaintance, was described in
+ a petition of 1706 as a Lieutenant who had served at Killiecrankie, and
+ had been in Major-General Ross's regiment ever since 1695.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 Atterbury.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 Evidently a familiar quotation at the time. Forster reads, incorrectly,
+ "But the more I lite MD."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20 See Letter 41, note 5.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21 See Letter 12, note 1.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22 In 1681, Elizabeth, only daughter and heiress of John Ayres, of the
+ City of London, then aged about twenty, became the fourth and last wife of
+ Heneage Finch, Earl of Winchelsea, who died in 1689. She lived until 1745.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23 See Letter 23, note 17.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24 Enoch Sterne (see Letter 4, note 17).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25 Lieut.-Col. Robert Sterne was in Col. Frederick Hamilton's Regiment in
+ 1695.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26 Letter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27 See Letter 13, note 10.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28 The title was, John Bull in his Senses: being the Second Part of Law is
+ a Bottomless Pit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29 See Letter 36, note 6.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30 Cf. note 9 above. Forster reads "nautyas," when the words would mean
+ "as naughty as nine," apparently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 31 See note 19 above.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 32 In 1549, James, second Earl of Arran, was made Duke of Chatelherault by
+ Henry II. of France. His eldest son died without issue; the second, John,
+ became first Marquis of Hamilton, and was great-grandfather of Lady Anne
+ Hamilton (Duchess of Hamilton), mother of the Duke of Swift's Journal. The
+ Earl of Abercorn, on the other hand, was descended from Claud, third son
+ of the Earl of Arran, but in the male line; and his claim was therefore
+ the stronger, according to the French law of inheritance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 33 Madams.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 34 This word is doubtful. Forster reads "cobbled."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 35 A mistake, apparently, for "writing." The letter was begun on March 8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 36 Silly jade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 37 O Lord, what a clutter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 38 On the death of Dr. William Graham, Dean of Wells, it was reported that
+ Swift was to be his successor. Dr. Brailsford, however, received the
+ appointment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 39 Abel Roper (1665-1726), a Tory journalist, published, thrice weekly,
+ the Postboy, to which Swift sometimes sent paragraphs. Boyer (Political
+ State, 1711, p. 678) said that Roper was only the tool of a party; "there
+ are men of figure and distinction behind the curtain, who furnish him with
+ such scandalous reflections as they think proper to cast upon their
+ antagonists."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 40 Joe Beaumont.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 41 Beg your pardon, Madams, I'm glad you like your apron (see Letter 41,
+ note 18).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 42 This word was smudged by Swift.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 43 I cannot find Somers in contemporary lists of officials. Cf. Letter 30,
+ note 16 and Letter 17, note 3.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 44 Obliterated and doubtful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 45 Words obliterated and illegible. Forster reads, conjecturally, "Pray
+ send Pdfr the ME account that I may have time to write to Parvisol."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0104" id="link2H_4_0104">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 44.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ 1 Addressed to "Mrs. Dingley," etc. Endorsed "Apr. 14."
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ 2 "Is" (MS.).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 The words after "yet" are partially obliterated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 See Letter 7, note 35.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 John Cecil, sixth Earl of Exeter (died 1721).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 See Letter 22, note 5.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 Arbuthnot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 A resort of the Tories.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 Deane Swift, a son of Swift's uncle Godwin, was a merchant in Lisbon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 Winces. Lyly says, "Rubbe there no more, least I winch."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 Probably William Whiston, who was deprived of the Lucasian
+ professorship at Cambridge in 1710 for his heterodox views. Parliament
+ having offered a reward for the discovery of means of finding the
+ longitude, Whiston made several attempts (1714 and 1721).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 Word obliterated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 Distilled water prepared with rosemary flowers. In Fielding's Joseph
+ Andrews, a lady gives up to a highway robber, in her fright, a silver
+ bottle which, the ruffian said, contained some of the best brandy he had
+ ever tasted; this she "afterwards assured the company was a mistake of her
+ maid, for that she had ordered her to fill the bottle with Hungary water."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 As I hope to be saved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 Added on the fourth page, as the letter was folded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Letter 45.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1 Addressed to "Mrs. Johnson," etc. Endorsed "May 1st."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2 A kind of clover, used for soothing purposes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0105" id="link2H_4_0105">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 46.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ 1 Addressed to "Mrs. Dingley," etc. Endorsed "May 15."
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ 2 Madam Ayris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 Simpleton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 Robert Benson (see Letter 6, note 36).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 See Letter 41, note 35 and Letter 43, note 7.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 The title was, An Appendix to John Bull still in his Senses: or, Law is
+ a Bottomless Pit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 Arbuthnot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 Enquiries by servants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 See Letter 17, note 5.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 Sick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 Afterwards Rector of Letcombe, Berks. It was to his house that Swift
+ repaired a few weeks before the Queen's death. On June 8, 1714, he wrote,
+ "I am at a clergyman's house, whom I love very well, but he is such a
+ melancholy, thoughtful man, partly from nature, and partly by a solitary
+ life, that I shall soon catch the spleen from him. His wife has been this
+ month twenty miles off at her father's, and will not return these ten
+ days, and perhaps the house will be worse when she comes." Swift spells
+ the name "Geree"; later on in the Journal he mentions two of Mr. Gery's
+ sisters, Betty (Mrs. Elwick) and Moll (Mrs. Wigmore); probably he made the
+ acquaintance of the family when he was living with the Temples at Moor
+ Park (see Letter 59, note 11).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 Because she is a good girl in other things.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0106" id="link2H_4_0106">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 47.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ 1 Addressed to "Mrs. Dingley," etc. Endorsed "June 5."
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ 2 Sice, the number six at dice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 At Laracor Swift had "a canal and river-walk and willows."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 Splenetic fellow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 One of them was by Oldmixon: Reflections on Dr. Swift's Letter to the
+ Earl of Oxford.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 Beg your pardon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 See Letter 25, note 9.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 On May 28, Lord Halifax moved an Address to the Queen that the
+ instructions given to the Duke of Ormond might be laid before the House,
+ and that further orders might be issued to him to act offensively, in
+ concert with the Allies. Wharton and Nottingham supported the motion, but
+ it was negatived by 68 votes against 40. A similar motion in the House of
+ Commons was defeated by 203 against 73.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 See Letter 34, note 10.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 See Letter 23, note 13.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 "Some Reasons to prove that no Person is obliged by his Principles, as
+ a Whig, to oppose Her Majesty: in a Letter to a Whig Lord."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 Several words obliterated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 Several words obliterated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 The bellman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 This present writing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 Please.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0107" id="link2H_4_0107">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 48.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ 1 Addressed to "Mrs. Rebecca Dingley," etc. Endorsed "June 23d."
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ 2 Mr. Ryland reads "second."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 As I hope to be saved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 See Letter 30, Sept. 18, 1711.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 Glad at heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 The threepenny pamphlet mentioned in Letter 47, note 11.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 I.e., for.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0108" id="link2H_4_0108">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 49.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ 1 Addressed to "Mrs. Dingley." Endorsed "July 8."
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ 2 See Letter 28, note 24.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 See Letter 10, note 2.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 See Letter 3, note 11.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 See Letter 48, note 4.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 Dr. William Lloyd&mdash;one of the Seven Bishops of 1688&mdash;was
+ eighty-four years of age at this time; he died five years later. He was a
+ strong antipapist, and a great student of the Apocalypse, besides being a
+ hard-working bishop. A curious letter from him to Lord Oxford about a
+ coming war of religion is given in the Welbeck Papers (Hist. MSS. Comm.)
+ v. 128.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 "Toland's Invitation to Dismal to dine with the Calf's Head Club." The
+ Earl of Nottingham (Dismal) had deserted the Tories, and Swift's imitation
+ of Horace (Epist. I. v.) is an invitation from Toland to dine with "his
+ trusty friends" in celebration of the execution of Charles I. The Calf's
+ Head Club was in the habit of toasting "confusion to the race of kings."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 Bolingbroke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 George Fitzroy, Duke of Northumberland (died 1716), a natural son of
+ Charles II., was also Viscount Falmouth and Baron of Pontefract. See Notes
+ and Queries, viii. i. 135.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 Enoch Sterne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 Templeoag (see Letter 48, Jun. 17, 1712).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 Swift probably was only repeating an inaccurate rumour, for there is no
+ evidence that Steele was arrested. His gambling scheme was withdrawn
+ directly an information was laid under the new Act of Parliament against
+ gambling (Aitken's Life of Steele, i. 347).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 Dr. William Moreton (1641-1715), Swift's diocesan, was translated from
+ the see of Kildare to that of Meath in 1705.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 Words obliterated. Forster reads conjecturally, "when ME wants me to
+ send. She ought to have it," etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0109" id="link2H_4_0109">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 50.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ 1 Addressed to "Mrs. Dingley," etc. Endorsed "July 23."
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ 2 "N.33" seems a mistake. Letter No. 32 was received after Swift had left
+ Kensington and gone to Windsor; see Letter 51, Aug. 7, 1712 and Letter 52,
+ Sept. 18, 1712 (Ryland).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 Dr. Moreton (see Letter 49, note 13).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 Memoranda.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 Again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 O Lord, drunken slut.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 There's for you now, and there's for your letter, and every kind of
+ thing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 Bolingbroke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 See Letter 13, note 10.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 Grub Street pamphlet. The title was, A Supposed Letter from the
+ Pretender to another Whig Lord.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 Arnold Joost Van Keppel, created Earl of Albemarle in 1697. He died in
+ 1718. The action referred to was at Denain, where the Dutch were defeated
+ by Villars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0110" id="link2H_4_0110">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 51.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ 1 Addressed to "Mrs. Dingley," etc. Endorsed "Aug. 14."
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ 2 Perhaps this was influenza.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 By the Stamp Act passed on June 10, 1712&mdash;which was repealed in
+ 1859&mdash;a duty of one halfpenny was levied on all pamphlets and
+ newspapers contained in half a sheet or less, and a duty of one penny on
+ those of more than half but not exceeding a whole sheet. Swift opposed the
+ idea in January 1711 (see Letter 15, note 1), and Defoe argued against the
+ Bill in the Review for April 26, 1712, and following numbers. Addison, in
+ the Spectator, No. 445, spoke of the mortality among authors resulting
+ from the Stamp Act as "the fall of the leaf."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 The title is, "Lewis Baboon turned honest, and John Bull politician.
+ Being the Fourth Part of Law is a Bottomless Pit." This pamphlet&mdash;really
+ the fifth of the series&mdash;appeared on July 31, 1712.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 Poor Laracor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 See Letter 12, note 1.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 On the death of the third Earl in 1712, the title of Earl of Winchelsea
+ passed to his uncle, Heneage Finch, who had married Anne, daughter of Sir
+ William Kingsmill (see Letter 24, note 7).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0111" id="link2H_4_0111">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 52.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ 1 Addressed to "Mrs. Dingley," etc. Endorsed "Oct. 1st. At Portraune"
+ (Portraine).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2 Oxford and Bolingbroke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 Including Hester Vanhomrigh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 He died on Sept. 15, 1712.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 Elizabeth Villiers, eldest daughter of Sir Edward Villiers, Knight
+ Marischal of England, and sister of the first Earl of Jersey. In 1695 she
+ married Lord George Hamilton (son of Lord William Douglas, afterwards Duke
+ of Hamilton), who was raised to the peerage of Scotland in 1696 as Earl of
+ Orkney. William III. gave her an Irish estate worth 26,000 pounds a year.
+ Swift's opinion of her wisdom is confirmed by Lord Lansdowne, who speaks,
+ in his Progress of Poetry, of
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Villiers, for wisdom and deep judgment famed,
+ Of a high race, victorious beauty brings
+ To grace our Courts, and captivate our Kings."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The "beauty" seems a poetic licence; Swift says the lady squinted "like a
+ dragon."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 Cliefden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 See Letter 12, note 7.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 Swift's sister (see Letter 9, note 22).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 Forster reads "returned."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 See Swift's letter to General Hill of Aug. 12, 1712
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 Swift's housekeeper at Laracor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 I.e., be made freemen of the City.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0112" id="link2H_4_0112">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 53.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ 1 Addressed to "Mrs. Dingley," etc. Endorsed "Octr. 18. At Portraune."
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ 2 "Sometimes, when better company was not to be had, he (Swift) was
+ honoured by being invited to play at cards with his patron; and on such
+ occasions Sir William was so generous as to give his antagonist a little
+ silver to begin with" (Macaulay, History of England, chap. xix.).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 The History of the Works of the Learned, a quarto periodical, was
+ published from 1699 to 1711.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 See Letter 35, note 4.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 See Letter 28, note 25.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 Lady Elizabeth Savage, daughter of Richard, fourth Earl Rivers (see
+ Letter 11, note 9), was the second wife of James Barry, fourth Earl of
+ Barrymore. Of Earl Rivers' illegitimate children, one, Bessy, married (1)
+ Frederick Nassau, third Earl of Rochford, and (2) a clergyman named
+ Carter; while another, Richard Savage, was the poet. Earl Rivers'
+ successor, John Savage, the fifth Earl, was a Roman Catholic priest, the
+ grandson of John, first Earl Rivers. On his death in 1728 the title became
+ extinct.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 No. 32.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 Very sick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 From "but I" to "agreeable" is partially obliterated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 Mrs. Swanton was the eldest daughter of Willoughby Swift, and therefore
+ Swift's second cousin. In her will Esther Johnson left to Swift "a bond of
+ thirty pounds, due to me by Dr. Russell, in trust for the use of Mrs.
+ Honoria Swanton."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 This sentence is partially obliterated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 See Letter 51, note 2.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 See Letter 5, note 16.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 The latter half of this sentence is partially obliterated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 Partly obliterated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 See Letter 8, note 2.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 Wise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 Partly obliterated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 See Letter 6, note 45.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20 This sentence is almost obliterated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0113" id="link2H_4_0113">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 54.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ 1 The MS. of this letter has not been preserved.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ 2 See Letter 26, note 2.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 Swift's friend, Dr. Pratt (see Letter 2, note 14), was then Provost of
+ Trinity College, Dublin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 Samuel Molyneux, then aged twenty-three, was the son of William Molyneux
+ (1656-1698), M.P. for Dublin University, a writer on philosophical and
+ scientific subjects, and the friend of Locke. Samuel Molyneux took his
+ M.A. degree in Dublin in 1710, and in 1712 visited England. He was
+ befriended by the Duke of Marlborough at Antwerp, and in 1714 was sent by
+ the Duke on a mission to the Court of Hanover. He held office under George
+ I., but devoted most of his attention to astronomical research, until his
+ death in 1728.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 Probably "The Case of Ireland's being bound by Acts of Parliament in
+ England stated" (1698).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 Oxford and Bolingbroke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 See Letter 36, note 18.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 See Letter 51, Aug. 7, 1712.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 George Ridpath (died 1726), a Whig journalist, of whom Pope (Dunciad, i.
+ 208) wrote&mdash; "To Dulness Ridpath is as dear as Mist." He edited the
+ Flying Post for some years, and also wrote for the Medley in 1712. In
+ September William Hurt and Ridpath were arrested for libellous and
+ seditious articles, but were released on bail. On October 23 they appeared
+ before the Court of Queen's Bench, and were continued on their
+ recognizances. In February 1713 Ridpath was tried and, in spite of an able
+ defence by leading Whig lawyers, was convicted. Sentence was postponed,
+ and when Ridpath failed to appear, as ordered, in April, his recognizances
+ were escheated, and a reward offered for his discovery; but he had fled to
+ Scotland, and from thence to Holland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 See Letter 52, note 5.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 Lady Orkney's sister, Barbara Villiers, who married John Berkeley,
+ fourth Viscount Fitz-Hardinge, had been governess to the Duke of
+ Gloucester, Queen Anne's son. She died in 1708, in her fifty-second year;
+ and on her husband's death four years later the peerage became extinct.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 For the street criers, see the Spectator, No. 251.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0114" id="link2H_4_0114">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 55.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ 1 Addressed to "Mrs. Dingley." Endorsed "Nov. 26, just come from
+ Portraine"; and "The band-box plot&mdash;D: Hamilton's murther."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2 Charles Mohun, fifth Baron Mohun, had been twice arraigned of murder,
+ but acquitted; and during his short but turbulent life he had taken part
+ in many duels. Even Burnet could say nothing in his favour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 This duel between the Duke of Hamilton (see Letter 27, note 9) and Lord
+ Mohun, who had married nieces of Lord Macclesfield, had its origin in a
+ protracted dispute about some property. The challenge came from Lord
+ Mohun, and the combatants fought like "enraged lions." Tory writers
+ suggested that the duel was a Whig conspiracy to get rid of the Duke of
+ Hamilton (Examiner, Nov. 20, 1712). The whole subject is discussed from
+ the Whig point of view in Boyer's Political State for 1712, pp. 297-326.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 "Will" (MS.).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 See Letter 27, note 9.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 George Maccartney (see Letter 11, note 13 and Letter 39, Jan. 22,
+ 1711-12 ) fought at Almanza, Malplaquet, and Douay. After the duel,
+ Maccartney escaped to Holland, but on the accession of George I. he
+ returned to England, and was tried for murder (June 1716), when Colonel
+ Hamilton gave evidence against him. Hamilton's evidence was discredited,
+ and he found it necessary to sell his commission and leave the country.
+ Maccartney was found guilty as an accessory, and "burnt" in the hand.
+ Within a month he was given an appointment in the army; and promoted to be
+ Lieutenant-General. He died in 1730.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 Colonel John Hamilton, of the Scots Guards. He surrendered himself, and
+ was tried at the Old Bailey on Dec. 12, 1712, when he was found guilty of
+ manslaughter, on two indictments; and on the following day he was "burnt"
+ in the hand. Hamilton died in October 1716, soon after Maccartney's trial,
+ from a sudden vomiting of blood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 "That" (MS.).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 The story (as told in the Tory Postboy of Nov. 11 to 13) was that on
+ Nov. 4 a bandbox was sent to the Earl of Oxford by post. When he began to
+ open it he saw a pistol, whereupon a gentleman present (Swift) asked for
+ the box, and opening it, by the window, found powder, nails, etc., so
+ arranged that, if opened in the ordinary way, the whole would have been
+ fired, and two barrels discharged different ways. No doubt a box so packed
+ was received, but whether anything serious was intended, or whether it was
+ a hoax, cannot be said with any certainty. The Earl of Oxford is said to
+ have met allusions to the subject with a smile, and Swift seems to have
+ been annoyed at the reports which were put into circulation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 "We have received a more particular account relating to the box sent to
+ the Lord Treasurer, as mentioned in our last, which is as follows," etc.
+ (Evening News, Nov. 11 to 13, 1712).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 Either "A Letter to the People, to be left for them at the Booksellers,
+ with a word or two of the Bandbox Plot" (by T. Burnet), 1712, or "An
+ Account of the Duel..., with Previous Reflections on Sham Plots" (by A.
+ Boyer), 1712. Swift's connection with the Bandbox Plot was ridiculed in
+ the Flying Post for Nov. 20 to 22.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 Cf. Letter 16, Feb. 20, 1710-11.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 This sentence is partially obliterated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 Part of this sentence has been obliterated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 See Letter 43, note 39. I have not been able to find a copy of the
+ paper containing Swift's paragraph.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 This sentence is partially obliterated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 See Letter 12, note 2.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 Apparently Humphrey Griffith, who was one of the Commissioners of Salt;
+ but Swift gives the name as "Griffin" throughout.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 See Letter 53, note 13 and Letter 5, note 16.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20 For these shorter letters Swift folded the folio sheet before writing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0115" id="link2H_4_0115">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 56.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ 1 Addressed to "Mrs. Dingley," etc. Endorsed "Decr. 18."
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ 2 Vengeance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 Charles Connor, scholar of Trinity College, Dublin, who took his B.A.
+ degree in the same year as Swift (1686), and his M.A. degree in 1691.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 The History of the Peace of Utrecht.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 See Letter 55, note 7.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 Lord Oxford's daughter Elizabeth married, on Dec. 16, 1712, Peregrine
+ Hyde, Marquis of Caermarthen, afterwards third Duke of Leeds (see Letter
+ 42, note 23 and Letter 24, note 5). She died on Nov. 20, 1713, a few days
+ after the birth of a son. Swift called her "a friend I extremely loved."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 "Is" (MS.).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 Disorders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 See Letter 34, note 10.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 John Francis, Rector of St. Mary's, Dublin, was made Dean of Leighlin
+ in 1705.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 See Letter 9, note 7.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 Possibly "have."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 See Letter 55, notes 9, 10, 11.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 This clause is omitted by Mr. Ryland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 See Letter 31, note 6.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 See Letter 54, Oct. 30, 1712.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 Thomas Jones, Esq., was M.P. for Trim in the Parliament of 1713-4.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 A Dutch agent employed in the negotiations with Lewis XIV.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 When I come home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0116" id="link2H_4_0116">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 57.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ 1 Addressed to "Mrs. Dingley," etc. Endorsed "Jan. 13."
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ 2 "Ay, marry, this is something like." The earlier editions give, "How
+ agreeable it is in a morning." The words in the MS. are partially
+ obliterated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 In this letter (Dec. 20, 1712) Swift paid many compliments to the
+ Duchess of Ormond (see Letter 17, note 5): "All the accomplishments of
+ your mind and person are so deeply printed in the heart, and represent you
+ so lively to my imagination, that I should take it for a high affront if
+ you believed it in the power of colours to refresh my memory."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 Tisdall's Conduct of the Dissenters in Ireland (see Letter 61, note 7).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 See Letter 9, note 20 and Letter 20, Apr. 13, 1711.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 Monteleon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 See Letter 5, note 8 and Letter 3, note 3.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 Utrecht, North and South Holland, and West Frieseland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 See Letter 46, note 11.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 See Letter 46, note 11.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 "On Queen Anne's Peace."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 See Letter 43, note 11. The poem was "Dryades, or the Nymph's
+ Prophecy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 See Letter 35, note 4.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 See Letter 17, note 3.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 Dr. Tobias Pullen (1648-1713) was made Bishop of Dromore in 1695.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 Lord Charles Douglas, Earl of Selkirk, died unmarried in 1739. When his
+ father, William, first Earl of Selkirk, married Anne, Duchess of Hamilton,
+ the Duchess obtained for her husband, in 1660, the title of Duke of
+ Hamilton, for life. James II. conferred the Earldom of Selkirk on his
+ Grace's second and younger sons, primogenitively; and the second son
+ having died without issue, the third, Charles, became Earl. The fifth son,
+ George, was created Earl of Orkney (see Letter 52, note 5). The difference
+ between Lord Selkirk and the Earl of Abercorn (see Letter 10, note 33) to
+ which Swift alludes was in connection with the claim to the Dukedom of
+ Chatelherault (see Letter 43, note 32).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 Heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 This sentence is almost illegible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 A reward of 500 pounds was offered by the Crown for Maccartney's
+ apprehension, and 200 pounds by the Duchess of Hamilton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20 In the proposed History of the Peace of Utrecht.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21 Mr. Ryland's reading. Forster has "Iss." These words are obliterated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22 Hoist. Cf."Hoised up the mainsail" (Acts xxvii. 40).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23 It was afterwards found that Miss Ashe was suffering from smallpox.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24 We are told in the Wentworth Papers, p. 268, that the Duchess of
+ Shrewsbury remarked to Lady Oxford, "Madam, I and my Lord are so weary of
+ talking politics; what are you and your Lord?" whereupon Lady Oxford
+ sighed and said she knew no Lord but the Lord Jehovah. The Duchess
+ rejoined, "Oh, dear! Madam, who is that? I believe 'tis one of the new
+ titles, for I never heard of him before."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25 A thousand merry new years. The words are much obliterated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26 Lady Anne Hamilton, daughter of James, first Duke of Hamilton, became
+ Duchess on the death of her uncle William, the second Duke, at the battle
+ of Worcester.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27 The quarrel between Oxford and Bolingbroke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28 See Letter 19, note 1.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29 Burnet (History, iv. 382) says that the Duc d'Aumont was "a goodnatured
+ and generous man, of profuse expense, throwing handfuls of money often out
+ of his coach as he went about the streets. He was not thought a man of
+ business, and seemed to employ himself chiefly in maintaining the dignity
+ of his character and making himself acceptable to the nation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30 Partially obliterated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 31 For the most part illegible. Forster reads, "Go, play cards, and be
+ melly, deelest logues, and rove Pdfr. Nite richar MD, FW oo roves Pdfr. FW
+ lele lele ME ME MD MD MD MD MD MD. MD FW FW FW ME ME FW FW FW FW FW ME ME
+ ME."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 32 On the third page of the paper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 33 See Letter 7, note 3.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0117" id="link2H_4_0117">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 58.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ 1 To "Mrs. Dingley," etc. Endorsed "Feb. 4."
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ 2 This sentence is scribbled over. Forster reads the last word as
+ "lastalls," i.e. rascals, but it seems rather to be "ledles."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 Dr. Peter Brown was appointed Bishop of Cork in 1709.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 See Letter 5, note 22.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 See Letter 5, note 3.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 See Letter 5, note 11.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 Dr. H. Humphreys, Bishop of Hereford, died on Nov. 20, 1712. His
+ successor was Dr. Philip Bisse (1667-1721), Bishop of St. David's (see
+ Letter 3, note 36).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 Thomas Keightley, a Commissioner of the Great Seal in Ireland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 Nearly obliterated. Mr. Ryland reads, "deelest MD."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 See Letter 57, note 14.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 In the Examiner for Jan. 5 to 9, 1712(-13), there is an account of the
+ game of Similitudes. One person thinks of a subject, and the others, not
+ knowing what it is, name similitudes, and when the subject is proclaimed,
+ must make good the comparisons. On the occasion described, the subject
+ chosen was Faction. The prize was given to a Dutchman, who argued that
+ Faction was like butter, because too much fire spoiled its consistency.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 Earl Poulett (see Letter 20, note 7).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 "Say" (MS.).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 Dr. Pratt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 See Letter 13, Jan. 6, 1710-11.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 This sentence is partially obliterated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 See Letter 31, note 10 and, in the same letter, Oct. 5, 1711.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 Cf. the account of Beatrix's feelings on the death of the Duke in
+ "Esmond", book iii. chaps. 6 and 7.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 See Letter 21, note 3.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20 "Her Majesty is all goodness and tenderness to her people and her
+ Allies. She has now prorogued the best Parliament that ever assembled in
+ her reign and respited her own glory, and the wishes, prayers, and wants
+ of her people, only to give some of her Allies an opportunity to think of
+ the returns they owe her, and try if there be such a thing as gratitude,
+ justice, or humanity in Europe. The conduct of Her Majesty is without
+ parallel. Never was so great a condescension made to the unreasonable
+ clamours of an insolent faction now dwindled to the most contemptible
+ circumstances."&mdash;Examiner, Jan. 12-16, 1712(-13).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21 Mr. Collins's "Discourse of Freethinking, put into plain English by way
+ of Abstract, for the use of the Poor," an ironical pamphlet on Arthur
+ Collins's Discourse of Freethinking, 1713.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22 The History of the Peace of Utrecht.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23 A line here has been erased. Forster imagined that he read, "Nite dear
+ MD, drowsy drowsy dear."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24 Hereford.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25 Very well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26 Sentence obliterated. Forster professes to read, "Pay can oo walk
+ oftener&mdash;oftener still?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27 See Letter 57, note 15.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28 Dr. Bisse, translated from St. David's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29 See Letter 58, note 7 and Letter 19, note 1.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0118" id="link2H_4_0118">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 59.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ 1 To "Mrs. Dingley," etc. Endorsed "Febr. 26."
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ 2 See Letter 58, note 21.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 See Letter 28, note 11.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 See Letter 55, note 9.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 A result of confusion between Erasmus Lewis and Henry Lewis, a Hamburg
+ merchant. See Swift's paper in the Examiner of Jan. 30 to Feb. 2,
+ reprinted in his Works under the title, "A Complete Refutation of the
+ Falsehoods alleged against Erasmus Lewis, Esq."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 Lord Dupplin (see Letter 5, note 34) had been created Baron Hay in
+ December 1711.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 A composition of inflammable materials.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 Assessors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 See Letter 6, note 12.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 See Letter 59, note 5.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 See Letter 46, note 11.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 See Letter 3, notes 21 and 22, Letter 39, Jan. 12, 1711-12 and Letter
+ 42, Mar. 1, 1711-12.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 Dr. Bisse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 See Letter 33, note 10.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 Forster reads, "something."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 Hardly legible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 See Letter 7, note 31.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 Stella's brother-in-law (See Letter 53, note 13, Letter 5, note 16 and
+ Letter 55, Nov. 18, 1712).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 Forster guesses, "Oo are so 'recise; not to oor health."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20 For "poo Ppt's." Mr. Ryland reads, "people's."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21 See Letter 57, 21 Dec. 1712.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22 See Letter 57, note 23.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23 See Letter 14, note 9.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24 Obliterated; Forster's reading.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25 Writing in October 1713, Lord Berkeley of Stratton told Lord Strafford
+ of "a fine prank of the widow Lady Jersey" (see Letter 29, note 3). "It is
+ well known her lord died much in debt, and she, after taking upon her the
+ administration, sold everything and made what money she could, and is run
+ away into France without paying a farthing of the debts, with only one
+ servant and unknown to all her friends, and hath taken her youngest son,
+ as 'tis supposed to make herself a merit in breeding him a papist. My Lord
+ Bolingbroke sent after her, but too late, and they say the Queen hath writ
+ a letter with her own hand to the King of France to send back the boy"
+ (Wentworth Papers, p. 357). See also Letter 63, note 8. I am not sure
+ whether in the present passage Swift is referring to the widow or the
+ younger Lady Jersey (see Letter 33, note 10).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26 Sir Thomas Clarges, Bart. (died 1759), M.P. for Lostwithiel, married
+ Barbara, youngest daughter of John Berkeley, fourth Viscount
+ Fitz-Hardinge, and of Barbara Villiers (see Letter 54, note 11), daughter
+ of Sir Edward Villiers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27 See Letter 43, Mar. 21, 1711-12 and Letter 49, Jul. 1, 1712.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28 Altered from "11" in the MS. It is not certain where the error in the
+ dates began; but the entry of the 6th must be correctly dated, because the
+ Feb. 6 was the Queen's Birthday.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29 See Letter 43, note 11 and Letter 57, note 12.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Letter 60.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1 Addressed to "Mrs. Dingley," etc. Endorsed "Mar. 7."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2 See Letter 5, note 23.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 Sedan chairs were then comparatively novel (see Gay's Trivia).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 Some words obliterated. Forster reads, "Nite MD, My own deelest MD."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 Peter Wentworth wrote to Lord Strafford, on Feb. 17, 1713, "Poor Mr.
+ Harrison is very much lamented; he died last Saturday. Dr. Swift told me
+ that he had told him... he owed about 300 pounds, and the Queen owed him
+ 500 pounds, and that if you or some of your people could send an account
+ of his debts, that I might give it to him, he would undertake to solicit
+ Lord Treasurer and get this 500 pounds, and give the remainder to his
+ mother and sister" (Wentworth Papers, 320).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 George St. John (eldest son of Sir Harry St. John by his second
+ marriage) was Secretary to the English Plenipotentiaries at Utrecht. He
+ died at Venice in 1716 (Lady Cowper's Diary, 65).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 Forster wrongly reads, "poor."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 "Putt" (MS.).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 See Letter 59, note 26.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 Montagu Bertie, second Earl of Abingdon (died 1743), was a strong Tory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 See Letter 11, note 61. These friends were together again on an
+ expedition to Bath in 1715, when Jervas wrote to Pope (Aug. 12, 1715) that
+ Arbuthnot, Disney, and he were to meet at Hyde Park Corner, proceed to Mr.
+ Hill's at Egham, meet Pope next day, and then go to Lord Stawell's to
+ lodge the night. Lord Stawell's seat, Aldermaston, was seventeen miles
+ from Binfield.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 See Letter 16, note 20.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 "I" (MS.).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 Obliterated. Forster reads, "devil," and Mr. Ryland, "bitch."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 See Letter 40, note 6.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 Victor Marie, duc d'Estrees, Marshal of France (died 1727).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 See Letter 55, note 18.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 Several words are obliterated. Forster reads, "the last word, God 'give
+ me"; but "'give me" is certainly wrong.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 See Letter 9, note 13. Sir Thomas Hanmer married, in 1698, at the age
+ of twenty-two, Isabella, Dowager Duchess of Grafton, daughter of Henry,
+ Earl of Arlington, and Countess of Arlington in her own right. Hanmer was
+ not made Secretary of State, but he succeeded Bromley as Speaker of the
+ House of Commons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20 William Fitzmaurice (see Letter 11, note 19 and Letter 27, note 11)
+ entered Christ Church, Oxford, matriculating on March 10, 1712-13, at the
+ age of eighteen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21 See Letter 11, note 11.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22 William Bromley, second son of Bromley the Speaker (see Letter 10, note
+ 1), was a boy of fourteen at this time. In 1727 he was elected M.P. for
+ Warwick, and he died in 1737, shortly after being elected Member for
+ Oxford University.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23 See Letter 14, note 12.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24 Sometimes "list" means to border or edge; at others, to sew together,
+ so as to make a variegated display, or to form a border. Probably it here
+ means the curling of the bottom of the wig.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25 The last eight words have been much obliterated, and the reading is
+ doubtful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26 Lady Henrietta Hyde, second daughter of Laurence Hyde, first Earl of
+ Rochester (see Letter 8, note 22), married James Scott, Earl of Dalkeith,
+ son of the Duke of Monmouth. Lord Dalkeith died in 1705, leaving a son,
+ who succeeded his grandmother (Monmouth's widow) as second Duke of
+ Buccleuch. Lady Catherine Hyde (see Letter 40, note 6) was a younger
+ sister of Lady Dalkeith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27 Swift first wrote "I frequent."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28 See Letter 52, note 5.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29 D'Estrees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30 Little (almost illegible).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0119" id="link2H_4_0119">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 61.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ 1 Addressed to "Mrs. Dingley," etc. Endorsed "Mar. 27."
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ 2 See Letter 3, note 20.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 Formerly Lady Rialton (see Letter 40, note 3).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 See Letter 58, note 8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 See Letter 11, note 39 and Letter 41, note 27.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 Pun on "gambol."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 See Letter 57, note 4.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 See Letter 41, note 7.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 "Upon Tuesday last, the house where His Grace the late Duke of Hamilton
+ and Brandon lived was hired for that day, where there was a fine ball and
+ entertainment; and it is reported in town, that a great lady, lately gone
+ to travel, left one hundred guineas, with orders that it should be spent
+ in that manner, and in that house" (Postboy, Feb. 26-28, 1712-13). The
+ "great lady" was, presumably, the Duchess of Marlborough.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 See Letter 36, note 14 and Letter 40, note 21.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 Trinity College, Dublin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 See Letter 60, note 19.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 See Letter 36, note 15.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 Dr. Pratt, Provost of Trinity College.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 Obliterated, and doubtful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 A deal at cards, that draws the whole tricks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 Previous editors have misread "Trevor" as "Treasurer." Thomas Trevor,
+ Chief-Justice of the Common Pleas, was created Baron Trevor, of Bromham,
+ in January 1712. By commission of March 9, 1713, he occupied the woolsack
+ during the illness of the Lord Keeper, Harcourt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 This is the only reference to Pope in the Journal. In his "Windsor
+ Forest" the young poet assisted the Tories by his reference to the peace
+ of Utrecht, then awaiting ratification.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 Several words have been obliterated. Forster reads, "Rove Pdfr, poo
+ Pdfr, Nite MD MD MD," but this is more than the space would contain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20 William Oldisworth (1680-1734), a Tory journalist and pamphleteer, who
+ published various works, including a translation of the Iliad. He died in
+ a debtors' prison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21 Some words obliterated. The reading is Forster's, and seems to be
+ correct.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22 Susan Armine, elder daughter of Sir William Armine, Bart., of Osgodby,
+ Lincolnshire, was created a life peeress in 1674, as Baroness Belasyse of
+ Osgodby. She died March 6, 1713. Her first husband was the Honourable Sir
+ Henry Belasyse, son and heir of John, Baron Belasyse, of Worlaby; and her
+ second, Mr. Fortney, of Chequers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23 See Letter 7, note 9.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24 A word before "Ppt" is illegible. Forster's reading, "yes," does not
+ seem right.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25 In November 1711 it was reported that Miss Kingdom was privately
+ married to Lord Conway (Wentworth Papers, 207), but this was not the case.
+ Lord Conway was a widower in 1713, but he married an Irish lady named
+ Bowden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26 Forster reads, "Nite, my own dee sollahs. Pdfr roves MD"; but the last
+ three words, at least, do not seem to be in the MS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27 Probably the Bishop of Raphoe's son (see Letter 29, note 20).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28 What.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29 As Master of the Savoy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30 William Burgh was Comptroller and Accountant-General for Ireland from
+ 1694 to 1717, when his patent was revoked. He was succeeded by Eustace
+ Budgell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 31 William Paget, sixth Lord Paget, died in March 1713, aged seventy-six.
+ He spent a great part of his life as Ambassador at Vienna and
+ Constantinople.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 32 Pocket.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 33 Forster reads, "Lele lele logues"; Mr. Ryland, "Lele lele... "
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0120" id="link2H_4_0120">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 62.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ 1 Addressed to "Mrs. Dingley," etc. Endorsed "Apr. 13."
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ 2 Esther Johnson's brother-in-law, Filby (see Letter 55, note 19).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 Earl Poulett (see Letter 20, note 7).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 Francis Annesley, M.P. for Westbury. His colleague in the representation
+ of that borough was Henry Bertie (third son of James, Earl of Abingdon),
+ who married Earl Poulett's sister-in-law, Anthony Henley's widow (see
+ Letter 12, note 24).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 "Has" (MS.).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 A dozen words are erased. The reading is Forster's, and appears to be
+ correct.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 The British Ambassadress's Speech to the French King. The printer was
+ sent to the pillory and fined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 The Examiner (vol. iii. No. 35) said that Swift&mdash;"a gentleman of
+ the first character for learning, good sense, wit, and more virtues than
+ even they can set off and illustrate"&mdash;was not the author of that
+ periodical. "Out of pure regard to justice, I strip myself of all the
+ honour that lucky untruth did this paper."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 A purgative electuary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 Bargains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 Three or four words illegible. Forster reads, "Nite, nite, own MD."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 Forster reads, "devil's brood "; probably the second word is "bawd:"
+ Cf. Letter 60, note 14 and Feb. 18, 1712-13.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 Several "moving pictures," mostly brought from Germany, were on view in
+ London at about this time. See Tatler, No. 129, and Gay's Fables, No. 6.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 See Letter 6, note 45.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 "Mr. Charles Grattan, afterwards master of a free school at
+ Enniskillen" (Scott).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 So given in the MS. Forster suggests that it is a mistake for "wood."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 See Letter 28, note 11.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 It is probable that this is Pope's friend, William Cleland, who died in
+ 1741, aged sixty-seven. William Cleland served in Spain under Lord Rivers,
+ but was not a Colonel, though he seems to have been a Major. Afterwards he
+ was a Commissioner of Customs in Scotland and a Commissioner of the Land
+ Tax in England. Colonel Cleland cannot, as Scott suggested (Swift's Works,
+ iii. 142, xviii. 137-39, xix. 8), have been the son of the Colonel William
+ Cleland, Covenanter and poet, who died in 1689, at the age of
+ twenty-eight. William Cleland allowed his name to be appended to a letter
+ of Pope's prefixed to the Dunciad, and Pope afterwards described him as "a
+ person of universal learning, and an enlarged conversation; no man had a
+ warmer heart for his friends, or a sincerer attachment to the constitution
+ of his country." Swift, referring to this letter, wrote to Pope, "Pray
+ tell me whether your Colonel (sic) Cleland be a tall Scots gentleman,
+ walking perpetually in the Mall, and fastening upon everybody he meets, as
+ he has often done upon me?" (Pope's Works, iv. 48, vii. 214).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 Henry Grey, Lord Lucas (died 1741), who became twelfth Earl of Kent in
+ 1702, was made Duke of Kent in 1710. He held various offices under George
+ I. and George II.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20 Forster found, among the MSS. at Narford, the "lie" thus prepared for
+ All Fools' Day. Richard Noble, an attorney, ran away with a lady who was
+ the wife of John Sayer and daughter of Admiral Nevill; and he killed Sayer
+ on the discovery of the intrigue. The incident was made use of by Hogarth
+ in the fifth scene of "Marriage a la Mode."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21 See Letter 5, note 3.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22 See Letter 13, note 10.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23 Charles XII.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24 "Is" (MS.).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25 Cibber says that he saw four acts of Cato in 1703; the fifth act,
+ according to Steele, was written in less than a week. The famous first
+ performance was on April 14, 1713.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26 The first number of the Guardian appeared on March 12, and the paper
+ was published daily until Oct. 1, 1713. Pope, Addison, and Berkeley were
+ among the contributors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27 See Letter 52, note 6.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28 See Letter 39, note 16.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29 The first preached after the period of his suspension by the House of
+ Lords. It was delivered at St. Saviour's, Southwark, before his
+ installation at St. Andrew's, and was published with the title, "The
+ Christian's Triumph, or the Duty of praying for our Enemies".
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30 Swift's curate at Laracor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 31 Richard Gorges (died 1728) was eldest son and heir of Dr. Robert
+ Gorges, of Kilbrue, County Meath, by Jane, daughter of Sir Arthur Loftus,
+ and sister of Adam, Viscount Lisburne. He was appointed Adjutant-General
+ of the Forces in Ireland 1697, Colonel of a new Regiment of Foot 1703,
+ Major-General of the Forces 1707, and Lieutenant-General 1710 (Dalton's
+ Army Lists, iii. 75).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 32 See Letter 60, note 10.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 33 Mrs. Oldfield.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 34 See Letter 56, note 6.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 35 Never saw the like.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 36 See Letter 53, note 10.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 37 The remainder has been partially obliterated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0121" id="link2H_4_0121">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER 63.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ 1 Addressed to "Mrs. Dingley," etc. Endorsed "May 4."
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ 2 Lord Cholmondeley (see Letter 36, note 15).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 Harcourt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 Forster's reading; the last two words are doubtful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 See Letter 7, note 27.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 Francis Palmes, who was wounded at Blenheim, was made a
+ Lieutenant-General in 1709. In 1707 he was elected M.P. for West Loo; in
+ 1708 he was sent as Envoy Extraordinary to the Duke of Savoy, and in 1710
+ to Vienna.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 Apparently "so heed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 Henry Villiers (died 1743), second son of the first Earl of Jersey and
+ of Barbara, daughter of William Chiffinch (see Letter 29, note 3 and
+ Letter 59, note 25).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9 See Letter 61, Mar. 8, 1712-13. The Speech and Address are in the
+ Commons' Journals, xvii. 278, 280. For the draft Address, in Swift's
+ handwriting, see the Portland Papers (1899), v. 276.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10 Scoffed, jeered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11 Dr. Gastrell (see Letter 25, note 8).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12 George Berkeley, afterwards Bishop of Cloyne, but then a young man of
+ twenty-eight, came to London in January 1713. He was already known by his
+ "New Theory of Vision" and "Treatise on the Principles of Human
+ Knowledge", and he brought with him his "Three Dialogues between Hylas and
+ Philonous". Steele was among the first to welcome him, and he soon made
+ the acquaintance of Addison, Pope, and Swift. On March 27, Berkeley wrote
+ to Sir John Perceval of the breach between Swift and the Whigs: "Dr.
+ Swift's wit is admired by both of them (Addison and Steele), and indeed by
+ his greatest enemies, and... I think him one of the best-matured and
+ agreeable men in the world." In November 1713 Swift procured for Berkeley
+ the chaplaincy and secretaryship to Lord Peterborough, the new Envoy to
+ Sicily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13 Forster reads, "all oo sawcy Ppt can say oo may see me"; but the words
+ are illegible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14 Possibly "see," written in mistake for "say."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 "J" (MS.).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16 Obliterated. Forster imagined that he read, "Nite dee logues. Poo Mr."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17 There were two General Hamiltons at this time; probably Swift's
+ acquaintance was Gustavus Hamilton (1639-1723), who was created Viscount
+ Boyne in 1717. Hamilton distinguished himself at the battle of the Boyne
+ and the capture of Athlone, and was made Brigadier-General in 1696, and
+ Major General in 1703. He took part in the siege of Vigo, and was made a
+ member of the Privy Council in 1710.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18 See Letter 43, note 38.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 The History of the Peace of Utrecht.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20 This is Forster's reading, and appears to be correct. The last word,
+ which he gives as "iss truly," is illegible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21 Belonging to Ireland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22 See Letter 40, note 1.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23 Another excellent reading of Forster's. I cannot decipher the last
+ word, which he gives as "dee rogues."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24 Sentence obliterated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25 The number at the beginning of each entry in the Journal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26 Mr. Ryland's reading. Forster has "morning, dee."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27 Dr. Thomas Lindsay (see Letter 6, note 45).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28 I think the "MD" is right, though Forster gives "M." The "Pr" is
+ probably an abbreviation of "Pdfr."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29 The last three lines have been obliterated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Letter 64.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1 Addressed to "Mrs. Dingley," etc. Endorsed "May 22."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2 Illegible. Forster reads, "and dee deelest Ppt."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 The last few words have been partially obliterated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 Am very angry. The last word is scribbled over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 The History of the Peace of Utrecht.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 The signature has been cut off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Letter 65.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1 Addressed to "Mrs. Dingley," etc. Endorsed "Chester Letter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2 "Others" (MS.).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 See Letter 10, note 31 and Letter 31, note 1.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 See Letter 7, note 7.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Journal to Stella, by Jonathan Swift
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+</pre>
+ </body>
+</html>