George Selwyn: His Letters and His Life

Helen Clergue
쬂
George Selwyn: His Letters and His Life

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Edited by E. S. Roscoe and Helen Clergue
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Title: George Selwyn: His Letters and His Life
Editor: E. S. Roscoe and Helen Clergue
Release Date: September 5, 2005 [eBook #16661]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GEORGE SELWYN: HIS LETTERS AND HIS LIFE***
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GEORGE SELWYN: HIS LETTERS AND HIS LIFE
Edited by
E. S. ROSCOE AND HELEN CLERGUE
London T. Fisher Unwin Paternoster Square
1899

PREFACE
IN the histories and memoirs of the eighteenth century the name of George Selwyn often occurs. The letters which he received have afforded frequent and valuable material to the student of the reign of George the Third. A large number of these were published by the late Mr. Jesse in the four volumes entitled "George Selwyn and his Contemporaries." Except, however, that Selwyn was regarded as the first humourist of his time, little was known about him, for scarcely any letters which he wrote had until recently been found. But in the Fifteenth Report of the Historical Manuscript Commission there were printed, amongst a mass of other material, more than two hundred letters from his untiring pen which had been preserved at Castle Howard. No one who has had an opportunity of examining the originals can fail to recognise the skill and labour with which the Castle Howard correspondence of Selwyn--wanting in most instances the date of the year--was arranged by Mr. Kirk on behalf of the Commission.
A correspondence, however, which illustrates vividly phases of an interesting and important period of English history, appeared to be deserving of presentation to the public in a separate volume, and with the explanations necessary to make the allusions in it fully understood.
A selection has therefore, in the following pages, been made from the Castle Howard letters. The aim of the editors has been to choose those which appeared most interesting and representative, and to place them in definite groups, supplementing them with such a narrative, remarks, and notes as would, without enveloping the correspondence in a quantity of extraneous material, enable the whole to present the life of Selwyn, and at the same time add another to the pictures of the age in which he lived.
The dates of the letters are those ascribed to them by Mr. Kirk.
The frequently incorrect spelling of proper names has not been altered.
The editors desire cordially to thank Lord Carlisle, not only for the permission to publish this correspondence, but for the kind assistance which he has given in other ways to the undertaking.
E. S. R. H. C.
November, 1899.

CONTENTS
CHAPTER 1.
GEORGE SELWYN: His LIFE, His FRIENDS, AND His AGE
CHAPTER 2.
1767-1769. THE CORRESPONDENCE COMMENCES .... Frederick, fifth Earl of Carlisle--Lady Sarah Bunbury--The Duke of Grafton--Carlisle, Charles Fox, and the Hollands abroad--Current Events--Card-playing--A dinner at Crawford's--Lady Bolingbroke --Almack's--The Duke of Bedford--Lord Clive--The Nabobs--Corporation of Oxford sell the representation of the borough--Madame du Deffand --Publication of Horace Walpole's "Historic Doubts on Richard the Third"--Newmarket--London Society--Gambling at the Clubs--A post promised to Selwyn--Elections--A purchase of wine--Vauxhall.
CHAPTER 3.
1773-1777; 1779 AND 1780 POLITICS AND SOCIETY. Fox's debts--Lord Holland--News from London--Interviews with Fox--The Fire at Holland House--A Visit to Tunbridge--Provision for Mie Mie--County business and electioneering at Gloucester--Lotteries --Fox and Carlisle--Highway adventures--London Society--Newmarket intelligence--An evening in town--Charles Fox and America--Carlisle declines a court post--money from Fox--Selwyn and gambling--A Private Bill committee--Selwyn in bad spirits--The Royal Society --Book-buying--Political affairs--London parks--Gainsborough--The Duchess of Kingston--Selwyn's private affairs--"The Diaboliad"--A dinner at the French Ambassador's--Politics and the clubs--In Paris --Electioneering again.
CHAPTER 4.
1781. THE DISASTERS IN AMERICA. A drum at Selwyn's--George, Lord Morpeth--Dr. Warner--Sale of the Houghton pictures--The House of Commons--Pitt's first speech--Selwyn unwell--Play at Brooks's--London gaieties--Fox and his new clothes --Gambling--The bailiffs in Fox's house--"Fish" Crawford--Montem at Eton--Mie Mie's education--Second speech of Pitt--Lord North--A Court Ball--Society and politics--The Emperor of Austria --Conversation with Fox--Personal feelings--American affairs--rd North and Mr. Robinson--State of politics--London Society.
CHAPTER 5.
1782. THE FALL OF LORD NORTH. Fox's political principles--The fifth Duke of Bedford--A little dinner--A debate in the Commons--The attack on Lord George Germaine --An evening at Brooks's--Pitt and his friends--Possible changes in the Cabinet--Faro at White's--A story of the Duke of Richmond--An Address to the King--A Levee--Play and politics at Brooks's --Government and the Opposition--Selwyn and his offices--The position of the King--Fears of change of administration--The King's objections to Fox--Probable debates--Political prospects--Debates and divisions--The fate of the King's friends--Illness of Lord Morpeth--Annoyance of Selwyn at the state of affairs--Fox and Selwyn--Fall of Lord North--A new Ministry--Official changes--Fox and Carlisle--Carlisle's position--Morpeth and Mie Mie.
CHAPTER 6.
1786-1791. THE CLOSING CENTURY. Political Events--At Richmond--The Duke of Queensberry's villa
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