Letters to and from Henrietta, Countess of Suffolk, and Her Second Husband, the Hon. George Berkeley; from 1712 to 1767: With Historical, Biographical, and Explanatory Notes, Volume 1J. Murray, 1824 |
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Page viii
... King , and Mrs. Howard was appointed one of the bedchamber - women to the new Princess of Wales . The elder Whig politicians became mi- nisters to the King . The most promising of the young lords and gentlemen of the party , and the ...
... King , and Mrs. Howard was appointed one of the bedchamber - women to the new Princess of Wales . The elder Whig politicians became mi- nisters to the King . The most promising of the young lords and gentlemen of the party , and the ...
Page x
... King , nor the notes of her conversations with the Queen , nor in any of her most confidential papers , found a single trace of the feeling which Walpole so confidently imputes . Lady Suffolk , in her old age , became Mr. Walpole's ...
... King , nor the notes of her conversations with the Queen , nor in any of her most confidential papers , found a single trace of the feeling which Walpole so confidently imputes . Lady Suffolk , in her old age , became Mr. Walpole's ...
Page xii
... King's resentment , open as it was against his son , was still more rooted against the princess , whom to his familiars he used , with a whimsical mix- ture of respect and rage , to designate as " cette diablesse Madame la Princesse ...
... King's resentment , open as it was against his son , was still more rooted against the princess , whom to his familiars he used , with a whimsical mix- ture of respect and rage , to designate as " cette diablesse Madame la Princesse ...
Page xiii
... King . She was fa- vourite to " cette diablesse Madame la Prin- cesse . It is therefore not surprising that they ... King's hostility - not so much on her own personal account , as on that of the Prince and Princess : and at last , by ...
... King . She was fa- vourite to " cette diablesse Madame la Prin- cesse . It is therefore not surprising that they ... King's hostility - not so much on her own personal account , as on that of the Prince and Princess : and at last , by ...
Page xx
... king entertained for her was rather derived from chance than from any combination of those tran- scendant qualities which Pope and Swift ascribed to their court divinity . " - Coxe's Life of Sir R. Walpole , vol . i . p . 280 . her ...
... king entertained for her was rather derived from chance than from any combination of those tran- scendant qualities which Pope and Swift ascribed to their court divinity . " - Coxe's Life of Sir R. Walpole , vol . i . p . 280 . her ...
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afterwards agreeable alludes allusion answer Arbuthnot Bath Bathurst bedchamber bedchamber-woman believe Bellenden Berkeley brother Campbell celebrated character compliments Countess Countess of Suffolk court daughter DEAN SWIFT dear desire died Duchess of Marlborough Duchess of Queensberry Duke England favour flatter George GEORGE BERKELEY give Hampden hath hear heart hope Horace Walpole Howard John king Lady Betty Lady Bristol Lady Hervey Lady Mohun Lady Suffolk letter Lord Bathurst Lord Chesterfield Lord Hervey Lord Ilay LORD PETERBOROUGH lordship lover MADAM maids of honour majesty Marble Hill Marlborough married Mary Miss never obliged occasion parliament person pleased pleasure Pope pray Prince Princess Probably queen received Richmond royal highness sincerity Sir Robert Walpole soon Stanhope sure tell thing thought told trouble Walpole's wife wish woman word write
Popular passages
Page 226 - Tis from high life high characters are drawn : A saint in crape is twice a saint in lawn ; A judge is just, a chancellor juster still ; A gownman learn'd ; a bishop what you will ; Wise if a minister ; but if a king, More wise, more learn'd, more just, more every thing.
Page xlv - And sensible soft melancholy. " Has she no faults then, (Envy says) Sir ?" Yes, she has one, I must aver; When all the world conspires to praise her, The woman's deaf, and does not hear.
Page 360 - Westphalia ham of a morning, ride over hedges and ditches on borrowed hacks, come home in the heat of the day with a fever, and (what is worse a hundred times) with a red mark on the forehead from an uneasy hat — all this may qualify them to make...
Page 369 - Nor good, nor bad, nor fools, nor wise ; They would not learn, nor could advise : Without love, hatred, joy, or fear, They led — a kind of — as it were : Nor wish'd, nor car'd, nor laugh'd, nor cried- : And so they liv'd, and so they died.
Page 398 - Lady Suffolk in the spleen, Runs laughing up to tell the Queen. The Queen, so gracious, mild, and good, Cries, 'Is he gone ! 'tis time he should.
Page 385 - that it was too small to live in, and too large to hang to one's watch;" and more sober critics have pronounced it ill suited to our climate or modes of life.
Page 189 - But she that drew the greatest number of eyes, was indisputably Lady Orkney.* She exposed behind, a mixture of fat and wrinkles; and before, a very considerable protuberance which preceded her. Add to this, the inimitable roll of her eyes, and her grey hairs, which by good fortune stood directly upright, and 'tis impossible to imagine a more delightful spectacle.
Page 270 - If your health and other duties allow your accession to this request (for the recommendation of the work to the booksellers is quite a secondary consideration, of minor importance in Mr. Rossetti's estimation, and I have, besides, explained to him how very limited...
Page 264 - ABOUT two hours before you were born I got my giddiness, by eating a hundred golden pippins at a time at Richmond ; and when you were four years and a quarter old, bating two days, having made a fine seat about twenty miles...
Page xlvi - I SAID to my heart between sleeping and waking, Thou wild thing, that always art leaping or aching, What black, brown, or fair, in what clime, in what nation, By turns has not taught thee a pit-a-pat-ation ? Thus accus'd, the wild thing gave this sober reply: See the heart without motion, tho