THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES Y • /£ • /&rZ/4cy ^f-ra*u^ /U^ S6*i, oz^c ^Z^^ . /?. 4^*^, THE CORRESPONDENCE OF THOMAS GRAY AND WILLIAM MASON, WITH LETTERS TO THE REV. JAMES BROWN, D.D. MASTER OF PEMBROKE COLLEGE. E D IT E D BY THE REV. JOHN MITFORD. SECOND EDITION, WITH ADDITIONAL ILLUSTRATIONS. LONDON: RICHARD BENTLEY, NEW BURLINGTON STREET, ^ublisfjcr in ©rtmiarg to Iljcr iWajcstj?. 1855. " Mihi illae Epistolae placent potissimum qua? sunt familia- rissimae, quae mordent, quaa blandiuntur, qua j narrant tanquam in aurem aliquid: et ut dicam apertius, earn ego censeo epistolam elegantissimam, qua? prajter gratiam sermonis, nihil habeat cur elegans videatur; ut sit ad manum quicquid scribas, et excidat, non emittatur, denique ut loqui ad angu- lum cum amico, non insonare ad forum videaris." — J. Ant. Campani Episcopi Aprutini Epistohc, edit. 'Menckenii. Lips. 1707. Lib. v. Ep. xxv. PR /S55 THE REV. ALEXANDER DYCE, WHOSE EXTENSIVE KNOWLEDGE OF OUR EARLY POETRY, UJDED TO A FAMILIAR ACQUAINTANCE WITH THAT OF GREECE AND ROME, AND WHOSE SUCCESSFUL LABOURS ON THE WORKS OF THOSE WHO FLOURISHED IN THE REST PERIOD OF THE DRAMA, FROM THE DAYS OF SHAKSPERE TO SHIRLEY, BY RESTORING THE AUTHENTIC PURITY OF THE TEXT, BY EXPLAINING THE OBSOLETE AMBIGUITIES OF THE LANGUAGE, AND BY ILLUSTRATING THE FORGOTTEN MANNERS AND CUSTOMS OF THE AGE, HAVE PLACED HTM AS A COMMENTATOR AND CRITIC IN HONOURABLE EQUALITY WITH TYRWHITT AND WARTON ; THIS VOLUME, IN MEMORY OF A LONG FRIENDSHIP, COMMENCED BY THE ATTRACTION OF SIMILAR STUDIES, AND CONTINUED IN THE CONFIDENCE OF MUTUAL REGARD, IS INSCRIBED BY HIS FAITHFUL SERVANT, THE EDITOR. Hi nliall, September I L853 PUEFACK. The Correspondence between Gray and Mason, which is now published in its entire form, was carefully preserved and arranged by the latter, from which he made a partial selection in his Memoirs of Gray. This volume at his death was bequeathed to his friend Mr. Stonhewer, and from him it passed into the hands of his relative, Mr. Bright of Skeffington Hall, Leices- tershire. When, in the year 1845, the library of Gray was sold by the sons of that gentleman, then deceased, this volume of Correspondence was purchased by Mr. Penn of Stoke Park, and 1 > y him was kindly placed " in my hands for publication.* Some engagements at the time prevented my preparing it for the press ; and further delay * One letter, addressed to West, and the " Travels," have been placed in the beginning of this Correspondence, as forming part of the manuscripts collected by Mason; the letter to West being imperfectly printed by Mason, and the Travels having been printed only in the late edition of (hay, \\ ill probably not be unacceptable to the readers of the volume VI PREFACE. arose from the difficulty experienced in ex- plaining the obscure allusions, and identifying the persons mentioned in it. This was only to he removed by inquiries to be made at a dis- tance, which occupied much time, and which, often proving unsatisfactory, had to be renewed in other channels. In the Correspondence of Lord Chesterfield, of Walpole, and others, we meet with names more or less familiar to the reader from the literary eminence, or social rank, or political notoriety attached to them, and less difficulty is felt in giving such notice of them as is required for the reader's instruction ; but Gray's correspondence was maintained for the most part in the seclusion of a collegiate life, and often relates to the small private circle of friends with whom he was connected, and to events only of local and partial importance. To give some personality to names, most of them new, even to those who are acquainted with the common biographies of Gray, has been found, from the lapse of time, a matter of some difficulty ; and success has only been attained by the assistance of various friends. To have passed over this part of the task would have been unsatisfactory, and considered a PREFACE. Ml dereliction of duty; and, though many of the persons whom the reader will meet with in t hese letters have remained unnoticed, and their names puhlicly unknown, they formed the select and intimate society of one who was not remarkable for the facility with which his acquaintance was gained, and who required some more than ordinary proofs of excellence in that select few on whom the confidence of his friendship was bestowed. This part of my task has been performed to the best of my ability ; less successfully, perhaps, than I could have wished, but scarcely short of my expecta- tions when I first entered upon it, as more than a century has passed since the Corre- spondence commenced, and those who could best have explained it have long passed away.* Perhaps the effect of it, on the whole, will be to remove some portion of the general im- pression of Gray's solitary and secluded life, and to show that, though deprived of domestic * From the Venerable J. Oldersliaw, Archdeacon of Norfolk, and Rector of Eedenhall, and from Mr. Professor Smyth, of Cambridge, I received some few anecdotes of the persons who were the contemporaries of Gray, with a faint remembrance of him from their communication ; and I believe that with these two all further knowledge from personal recollection has closed. Vlll PREFACE. endearments, he had a small enlightened circle of friends in his own and in other colleges, by whom he was esteemed, and to whose society he could always resort : and with many also beyond the precincts of the university he held correspondence. At Mason's rectory at Aston, at Dr. Wharton's, further north, in Durham, at Mr. Chute's at the Vine, he was a frequent visitor; and at Stoke, once his mother's re- sidence, he could always enjoy the leisure and quiet that were so welcome and necessary to him.* In his later years, such was his high reputation and character, that whoever received him as a guest felt that an honour had been conferred. His friends treasured up his little familiar sayings and manner of expression ; t * Amidst many changes, the room in this house at Stoke which Gray occupied has been very piously preserved, as a spot of classic interest, not to be disturbed or defaced, when all around it has undergone alteration. A view of it may be seen in the Eton edition of Gray piiblished by Mr. Williams. f As, for instance, in one of Mason's unpublished letters, in his Correspondence with Lord Harcourt, he says, — " My -• ivants are in what Mr. Gray called the fever of packing vp for my York residence." — Aug. 10, 1793. For the notice of this passage I am indebted to my friend Mr. Samuel Rogers, who met with it when reading the Correspondence preserved at PREFACE. IX and a gentleman, who long after the death of Gray paid a visit to Mr. Nicholls of Elundeston, told me that for the week he remained in the house the conversation turned almost entirely upon Gray.* It may perhaps he asked, why a narrative containing a more complete account of the circumstances of Gray's life, which would have included also a fuller mention of his friends, did not appear in Mason's Memoirs — a work that has formed the foundation of all subse- quent hiographies. That volume, which was dedicated by a grateful hand to the memory of his illustrious friend, and which has been ever esteemed a model of elegant composition and structure, was made with great and careful consideration of the duty to be performed, and with an unusual delicacy in the selection of the materials; and this was deemed requisite at the time, which followed so closely on Gray's Nuneham, which has subsequently been very kindly lent to me by the present proprietor, and for which I publicly express my thanks. * The anecdotes of Gray given in Mr. Mathias's observa- tions on his character and writings are all derived from Mr. Nicholls. Mr. Mathias was resident at ('ami nidge during the lasl year of Gray's Life, but he never saw him. X PREFACE. death. Notwithstanding the general bright- ness of the poet's reputation, and the consent of the "chosen few" in the admission of his superior genius, the Elegy * was in truth the only one of his poems that was universally popular. The subject of it was attractive ; the imagery recommended by its elegance ; and the sentiments and reflections were not too deep for the common apprehension. " The Churchyard," Johnson says, "abounds with images which find a mirror in every mind, and with sentiments to which every bosom returns an echo. The four stanzas beginning ' Yet e'en these bones ' are to me original. I have never seen the notions in any other place. Yet he that reads them here persuades himself that he has always felt them." f This was not the case with the Odes.! The principles * As a curiosity in criticism, I give the notice of Gray's Elegy as it appeared in the leading review of the day — the Monthly RevieAv. " An Elegy in a Country Churchyard. 4to. Dodsley. Seven pages. — The excellence of this little piece amply compensates for its want of quantity." f " C'est le coeur, il faut l'avouer, plus que l'esprit, qui lit la po&ie." \ I am speaking of those Odes on which his high reputation is chiefly founded, and which were the matured products of his later years. The Ode to Eton College has always and PREFACE. XI on which they were formed, and the orna- ments they required, were less adapted to the puhlic taste and knowledge. They were of too high a flight. The system was too re- fined, the ideal abstractions too remote, and the language perhaps too learned and elabo- rate. There was no story to unfold by which passion could be excited, nor any narrative to allure by which curiosity could be gratified. The reviewers of the day cavilled at them ; the men of wit endeavoured to hold them up to ridicule ; and even Hurd, the leading critic of that age, mentioned them with a courteous and attempered praise, as beyond the common vein of such things. Mason, therefore, was careful in the additions he made to what already had appeared, and did not even dare to present deservedly been a great favourite; and what we possess of the beautiful Fragment on Vicissitude makes us lament its unfinished form, for it would probably have equalled the other in merit and popularity. It is curious that Dr Barnard, a scholar in the first rank and a poet, should have been unfa- vourable to the publication of this fragment, unless he thought it injurious to Gray's reputation to have the " sweepings of his study " made public. On the new lyrical metre of these noble Odes, the Bard and the Progress of Poetry, unknown before Gray, and on their surpassing excellence, see Mathias's Observations on Gray's Writings, p. 71. Xll PREFACE. that beautiful torso or fragment alluded to in the note without repairing and completing it with his own hands. While to enlarge the circle of personal anecdote, and to admit the public with open confidence into a more inti- mate knowledge of Gray's private life and habits of intercourse, Mason would have con- sidered as almost treacherous to his friend, as it was also directly opposed to his own temper and conduct, which was, to all but his intimate friends, cold and reserved, and not without a disposition to form austere and perhaps un- favourable judgments of others.* * Mason was much governed in his opinions and judg- ments by his strong political feelings. He hated a Tory, and this must have been the chief cause of his dislike of his Diocesan, which he too openly showed, both in conduct and in correspondence; but the manner in which he speaks, in a Letter I possess, of two ladies whose recent loss society is now lamenting, and whose varied attainments formed only one part of the fascinations they possessed, must have arisen, I think, from their having superseded him in the friendship of the master of Strawberry Hill. Mason's satirical powers were dormant at no period of his life. The world only knew them as they appeared from him "jam senior Peleus ;" but they burst out when he was yet at the university, "nee adkuc mafurus Achilles," 1 and continued in various flashes through whole life. PREFACE. Xlll Vigilantly to guard Gray's memory from any attack upon it, nor by imprudent or incautious admissions of his own to afford "•round for critical animadversion or envious cavil, was his object. For this he kept some poetical pieces in reserve ;* for this he used the large epistolary stores, placed from various quarters in his hands, with a severe ceconomy of selection ; and, with this in view, he abridged and transposed the letters he did publish so that scarcely one is entire or unaltered. Yet that Mason performed his work of love in the best manner it could have been done must be acknowledged ; and into no other hands could it have been with such safety entrusted,! for there were then difficulties in more freely open- ing the volume of private life. Within the walls of the university and without, there were private jealousies and personal animosities thai might have been awakened ; and in one or two * Mr. Fox used to lament that Mason withheld any of Gray's Translations from the Classics, so valuable to an English reader. ■j" I have heard that he asked and obtained the assistance of his friend Dr. Hurd in the selection of the papers; but there is no authority for the report that I am aware of, except a casual and private letter. XIV PREFACE. instances, where Mason has seemed to break through his usual chain of reserve, I question whether he was not incited by the dislike which he himself felt for the persons held up to ridi- cule and contempt by his friend. Some difficulties have arisen, which, how- ever, I hope are mostly overcome, from Gray's habit of mentioning those of whom he wrote only by the initial letters of their name. This was partly a matter of habit, partly of usage by others, and partly, I think, it grew out of a general distrust of the post-office at that period. Walpole has repeated his suspicions or complaints on the subject ; and I found that much of Mason's correspondence with him was transmitted through private hands. Gray also indulged in a habit, that seemed very amusing to him, of designating his friends and others by what the French call le so- briquet, by us termed nicknames.* Thus, * Nicknames were commonly given to joolitical characters in those days. Lord Temple was called " Tiddy-doll ;" the Duke of Cumberland "the Butcher;" Lord Shelburne's title is well known ; and many may be seen in the newspapers of the time, and some are mentioned in the notes to the Grenville Correspondence, iv. p. 171-2, and iii. Pref. xxxiii. PREFACE. XV King- George the Second is styled " the Old Horse;" the Duke of Newcastle "Old Fobus;"Lord Sandwich " Jemmy Twitcher ; " Mr. Brown, the Fellow of Pembroke, " Le Petit Bon Homme;" the Rev. Mr. Palgrave "Old Pa.;" and Mason himself was " Scrod- dles." Through these verbal masks, however, the real persons were easily discovered; but why Lord Harcourt, in his Manuscript Corre- spondence with Mason, always calls Horace Walpole "your wine merchant," is an enigma that I have not yet been able to decipher. The university in which Gray resided so large a portion of his life,* could not with justice be censured if it did not bestow its voluntary honours on one, who lived there as a private person, almost unconnected with it, and without any official capacity or rank ; nor could he be said to be neglected, whose characteristic re- serve forbade any ready approach to him ; but he was treated with the general respect due to his great talents and acquirements, and some few of the most enlightened and illustrious members of the society are ranked among his * He was entered a fellow commoner of Pembroke Hall, and in that capacity he resided there. XVI PREFACE. friends. * In his later years, from growing in- iirniity, lie did not often appear in public, unless occasionally a day of sunshine, and the softer breath of spring, allured him to the Botanic Garden, to watch the progress of vege- tation (one of his daily occupations in his own rooms), and to make an addition to his floral calendar.! Beyond his own college, therefore, he was personally but little known ; and his studies and pursuits were totally unconnected with those of the society among which he lived. In the Letters, however, now printed, his opinions of men and . things may be dis- * These observations have been occasioned by the remark made by a late writer, " Cambridge, indeed, though honoured by the education of almost all the great poets of our country, has not been very propitious to the votaries of the Muse. Spenser, Milton, Dryden, Cowley, Otway, and Gray, were dismissed by their respective societies, if not without an acknowledgment, at least without the reward of their genius," &c To this reproach the university, I think, may readily find an answer from a better hand than mine : Non nostrum est, inquam, tantas attingere laudes. f Gray, during the chief part of his life, kept a daily record of the blowing of flowers, the leafing of trees, the state of the thermometer, the quarter from which the wind blew, and the falling of rain: these he entered into his pocket journals, in liis delicate and correct handwriting, with the utmost pre- cision, and sometimes into a naturalist's calendar in addition. PREFACE. XV11 closed, without the imputation of any improper or offensive freedom, for time has removed all objections that could once have been reasonably made ; while, through them, a fuller and more lively portrait of himself may be obtained. The close reserve of his general manner may be advantageously contrasted with his playful humour and kindness to his friends ; his warm attachments and his affectionate language may be seen coming more brightly out of the cold surface of his common demeanour ; perhaps showing that some part of it was assumed, as a necessarv defence against intrusion and cnriositv. "The melancholy Gray" will not indeed disappear altogether ; and there were events and disappointments which had affected him deeply, the effects and remembrance of which he never could remove ; but, more than all, " the long disease of life " accompanied him from his earliest to his latest years, and clouded with a constant and melancholy shadow the best and brightest days of his ex- istence. His private journals, some of which I possess, and others which I have read, mark, day by day, the fatal presence and progress of disease, and the vigilant attention and careful XV111 PREFACE. means by which, however ineffectually, he en- deavoured to meet its influence. He kept the records relating to his health in Lathi, and such expressions as the following occur in almost every page : — " Insomnia crebra, atque expergiscenti surdus quideni doloris sensus ; frequens etiam in regione sterni oppressio et cardialgia gravis, fere sempiterna." A com- plete decay of the powers of nature, long threatening and steadily advancing, preceded Ms death.* Much has been said of the fastidious delicacy of his manners and habits of life; this, how- ever, he had in common with Walpole, being probably acquired or increased by both during their residence abroad ; and it would have been less noticed, or more readily overlooked, in one to whose rank and fortune it might be supposed to belong; but in Gray it appeared in stronger contrast with his circumscribed means, his slender fortune, and his humbler * The Rev. Mr. Carey, through whom the great Florentine Poet has become our own, has mentioned his conversing with the college servant who helped to remove Gray from the dinner table in the hall, when suddenly attacked by his last fatal illness. PREFACE. XIX station, which brought him into the society of persons of a different character and habits : perhaps, too, some part of it, in any excess beyond what was natural to him, was as- sumed, to keep his secluded path of life as clear from interruption and inquisitive approach as he could. His main resource against the depressing influence of disease was in constant employment. Mason, in a letter to Lord Har- court, says, " ' To be employed, is to be happy,' said Gray ; and if he had never said anything else, either in prose, or even in verse, he would have deserved the esteem of all posterity."* He certainly practised as he spoke ; for his library bore witness to an extent of curiosity, a per- severance of research, and an accuracy of ob- servation, with a minute diligence in recording what he had gained, and gathering in the harvest of the day, that is hardly to be pa- ralleled in any one who was so gifted with original genius, and the power of forming his own creations of thought. Moreover, this in- defatigable attention was not always devoted to the accomplishment of any one particular * From an unpublished letter, Feb. 20, ]7'.t2. See also Dr. Wharton's letter in the present volume, p. 41!."). b 2 XX PREFACE. object, or the completion of any favourite in- quiry, but extended over every branch of lite- rature remote from common curiosity, and was pursued through the minutest and most distant channels of research ; so that on many subjects it would appear as pointing to no other end but that of making time subservient to the abstract investigation of truth, and the general enlarge- ment of knowledge. It was said of a contem- porary of his, " that he never touched any subject which he did not adorn;"* but of Grav it mav with as much truth be observed, that he seldom closed his laborious inquiries till he had exhausted the means of further investigation. To him, the Genealogical Re- searches of Dugdale were incomplete ; the scientific language of Linnaeus imperfect ; and the History of the Chinese Dynasties, in fifteen quarto volumes, by Grosier, needed his verbal corrections, and supplemental improvements, before it was worthy of being enrolled in the archives of Pekin. Gibbon, it is well known, in a Note to his His- * Dr. Johnson said of Goldsmith, " Nullum tetigit quod non ornavit," though in Latinity somewhat dubious. PREFACE. XXI tory, lamented, "that Gray, instead of compiling tables of chronology and natural history, did not apply the powers of his genius to finish the philosophical poem, of which he left so ex- quisite a specimen;" but a later writer,* in his admiration of Gray's genius, has far ex- ceeded the cautious language and the moderate desires of the Historian ; and has regretted to behold " the fatal gulf of pertinacious industry in which the Poet's fire and genius was seen to drop, and which perhaps extinguished in its first conception some great epic work, which would have placed the author on a level, which he was entitled to ascend, with Spenser and Tasso." The answer however to the reason- able wish of Gibbon, in which all must par- ticipate, will also suffice for the more am- bitious vision of the other admirer, and show why such lofty aims could not be accom- plished. When a friend once asked of Gray, why he never finished the fragment of " The Alliance of Education and Government," he * I allude to Dr. Whitaker, the historian, antiquary, and philologer, &c. a person of learning, talents, and high character, and who added to great acquirements much of the elegance and enthusiasm of the poetic mind. XX11 PREFACE. said, " Because he could not ;" and then ex- plained himself somewhat to this effect, " I have been used to write chiefly lyric poetry, in which, the poems being short, I have accus- tomed myself to polish every part of them with care, and, as this has become a habit, I can scarcely write in any other manner ; the labour of this in a long poem would hardly be to- lerable, aDd, if accomplished, it might possibly be deficient in effect, by wanting the chiaro- scuro." Mr. Mathias also says, that when one asked Gray why he had written so little poetry, he answered, " It was from the great exertion it cost him in the labour of compo- sition."* That this limce labor was irksome and un- satisfactory may be seen in the number of unfinished pieces which he left behind him, the Agrippina — the Ode to Vicissitude— the Fragment on Government — the Hymn to Ig- norance — the Latin poem De Principiis Cogi- tandi ; and even The Bard itself — called his great lyric master-piece — was for some years lying by him, and only finished by an accident. ' Me juval raris auribus plaGere." Martial, Ep. ii. 86. PREFACE. XX11L And now we may safely hesitate before we repeat the complaint of the misapplication of the Poet's studies and occupation. Each species of poetry seems distinguished from another by its peculiar and characteristic style, and it is praise enough, when the attain- ment of excellence is so rare, to have acquired a mastery over one. " The nearest approach to perfection," says a writer on a kindred art, " can only be in carrying to excellence one great quality with the least alloy of collateral defects." Thus we find that Gray's delicately enamelled language, sparkling with the gems culled from the remoter treasures of our early poetry, woven into lyric harmony, and set off with depth of colour and variety of imagery, could not be successfully transplanted into the broader spaces of a different species, without losing its characteristic and congenial beauty, — that the structure of the Epic fable demanded a dif- ferent treatment from the language of the Lyre, which requires a greater elevation of diction, bolder figures, transitions less smoothly con- nected, and digressions more sudden and re- mote. Nor must it be forgotten that in the XXIV PREFACE. construction of works of great length and high design, which appeal to the hest faculties of the intellect, where reason must approve what ima- gination admires, there is wanted an energy of will, and a vigorous concentration of the powers, that will not weary under the pressure of the dutv that is undertaken ; that can awaken at will Inspiration from her repose, and send Imagination on the wing after new conquests ; and, readily acknowledging his commanding genius, we must confess that this great task could scarcely have been accomplished by the author of the Bard. To him the calmer occu- pation of research, and the studious contem- plation of the thoughts of others, through the medium of some favourite pursuit, would be better adapted ; and theo, if the Muse did visit him in his happier hours, she would come to gather the fruits which leisure had accumu- lated ; and to find a mind willing to welcome her, enriched with study and invigorated by repose; with new sentiments to warm the heart, and fresh knowledge to animate the mind. Perhaps too it might be said, that under the shelter of academic bowers is not to be found PREFACE. XXV the most favourable residence of the Muse, nor that the seat of science and learning- is most congenial to the exercise of the poetic faculty, which expands freely when concentrating its powers in its own domain. The means of gratifying an extended curiosity with ease, among the rich libraries of an university, and a natural sympathy with the pursuits of others, must have a strong tendency to disengage the mind from its own proper exercise and con- genial occupations ; from the thoughts that find their best culture in solitary reflection ; and from the steadfast contemplation of those ideal creations that are reflected in the mirror of the visionary world. The letters which contain the verbal correc- tions and criticisms on Mason's Poetry will not be read without interest, at least by those who know the great attention paid by Gray to pro- priety and perspicuity of expression, and to the language transparently representing the image of the thought. They will, I think, not only admit the general correctness of Gray's obser- vations, but feel somewhat surprised that a person like Mason, cradled in poetry, should have given room for them in so great a degree; XXVI PREFACE. but there is a passage, for which we are in- debted to the recollection of Mr. Mcholls, which will throw some light on the subject ; and though the name of the person alluded to, from obvious motives, is not mentioned by him, that of the author of Caractacus is to be under- stood. — " Speaking of a modern writer, whose poetry was sometimes too languid, Mr. Gray said, ' it was not a matter of words, for he never gave himself time to think, but he imagined that he should succeed best by writing hastily in the first fervour of his imagination; and therefore he never waited for epithets if they did not occur at the time readily, but left spaces for them, and put them in afterwards. This enervated his poetry, and will do so universally if that method is adopted ; for nothing is done so well as at the first concoction;' and he added, ' We think in words ; poetry consists in expression, if that term be properly under- stood.' " * I have still some materials by me which I think will not be unacceptable to the public, partly relating to Gray and partly to those con- * See Mathias's observations on Mr. Gray's Writings, p. 51. PREFACE. XXV11 noctccl with him and his history, that may serve to illustrate what is already published, and complete in some points our acquaintance with the circumstances of Ids life. It was the intention of Gray to collect and publish the poetical remains of Ms friend Richard West ; and probably this tablet, inscribed by the hand of friendship, would have given us in words warm from the heart, such a portrait of one whose genius and virtues were laid in too early a tomb, as would have shewn from what a rich and copious source the few, but beautiful, re- mains we possess had sprung, and what might have been expected from him in the maturity of his powers. Why Gray left his design un- accomplished is not known; but it may be endeavoured, with the assistance of new ma- terials, not indeed to supply the office which he left unfulfilled, but to raise the best monu- ment to the memory of West from his own works which, at so late a period, can be done. Together with these it is proposed to give extracts from a few unpublished manuscripts of Mason, and chiefly from his correspondence with his friends, and some letters from other hands, which may form no unpleasing conimen- XXV111 PREFACE. tary on the character and writings of Horace AValpole. In this manner the little circle of friends may again be brought together, and the few additional touches that will be the result, may perhaps be considered as not without their value. In the meantime I present my readers with some brief notes on Gray by the hand of AValpole; I do not know the time when they were written. They are indeed very unfinished, and seem to have been composed in haste; but they have added something to our knowlege of the Poet's history, and they acquire an authentic value from the quar- ter from which they come. And now it only remains for me publicly to express my thanks to those who, in the most friendly manner, have assisted me in my inquiries ; — to the Rev. J. Power, Pellow of Pembroke College, I am under deep obligations ; and, while I scarcely know * what apologies will excuse the trouble which I gave, I yet most gratefully acknowledge the value of the information it produced : — in my friend Mr. T. Watts, of the British Museum, I possess a treasure-house of literary infor- mation, to which I have never applied hi vain; PREFACE. XXIX for his power to instruct is always accompanied by his readiness to oblige : — my learned friend the Ilev. Joseph Hunter never refused me a request, though sometimes not very reason- ably made : — nor am I under obligations of less weight to Mr. Charles Wright, Libra- rian to Mr. Pcnn, who, in the most liberal manner, placed all the manuscripts and books, which consisted of the most valuable portion of Gray's library, at my command, and assisted me by his knowledge in the examination and use I made of them. Gray's Correspondence with the Rev. James Brown, which I received from the same quarter as the other, will be found to form a valuable addition to it, The Master of Pembroke Col- lege was honoured by the friendship of the Poet during his life, and to him was committed the sacred duty of accompanying his remains to the grave. It would have been of advantage if I could have had access once more to the original manuscripts of this Correspondence, by a colla- tion of which I believe a few slight errors might be corrected, and the orthography of one or two names rectified. This, however, XXX PREFACE. from circumstances that occurred, it was not in Mr. Wright's power to bestow ; and I believe that no mistake has occurred in the transcript which can be considered of real importance. A few words, however, used in the freedom of familiar correspondence, have been omitted in- tentionally by me. If the notes which I have added serve to ex- plain the text and assist the reader, my purpose, which is a very humble one, is fulfilled. " Illam arrogantiam a me vehement er amolior, et ob- nixe postulo, ut credar eruditos docere voluisse. Sentio enim quam sint pleraque in his per- vulgata, et quotidianse apud literatos observa- tionis. Sint modo iis accepta, qui adhuc in discendo occupantur. Si quse apud Graium obscura sunt, aliquatenus illustrent, si quae errata, forte corrigant ; effecero quod volui, et libera vero, in quantum potui, fidem meam." " MR. THOMAS GRAY. (BY THE HON. HORACE WALPOLE.) " He was the son of a money scrivener, by Mary Antrobus, a milliner in Cornhill, and sister to two Antrobus' s who were ushers of Eton School. He was born in 1716, and edu- cated at Eton College, chiefly under the di- rection of one of his uncles, who took prodigious pains with him, which answered exceedingly. He particularly instructed him in the virtues of simples. He had a great genius for music and poetry. Erom Eton he went to Peter House at Cambridge, and in 1739 accompanied Mr. H. W. in travelling to Erance and Italy. He returned in 1741, and returned to Cambridge again. His letters are the best I ever saw, and had more novelty and wit. One of his first pieces of poetry was an answer in English verse to an epistle from H. W.* At Naples he wrote a fragment, describing an earthquake, and the origin of Monte Nuovo, in the style of * This poem I do not know. XXxii MEMOIR OF GRAY. Virsril :* at Home an Alcaic ode, in imitation of Horace, to R. West, Esq.t After his return he wrote the inimitable ode, On a Distant Prospect of Eton College ; another moral ode ; and that beautiful one on a cat of Mr. Wal- pole's drowned in a tub of gold fishes. These three last have been published in Dodsley's Miscellanies. He began a poem on the re- formation of learning, but soon dropped it, on rinding his plan too much resembling the Dunciad. $ It had this admirable line in it : ' And gospel-light first flashed from Bullen's eyes.' He began, too, a philosophical poem in Latin, § and an English tragedy of Agrippina, and some other odes, one of which, a very beautiful one, entitled, ' Stanzas written in a Country Churchyard,' he finished in 1750. He was a very slow, but very correct writer. Being at * Fragment of a poem on the Gaurus. See Works, i. 192. f Carmen ad Favonium Zephyrinum, p. 189. I Walpole seems to have confounded the Hymn to Ig- norance (see Works, i. 140) with the Alliance of Education and Government (p. 143), and he has substituted flashed for dawned. § The poem De Principiis Cogitandi. See Works, i. 204. MEMOIR OF GRAY. XXX111 Stoke in the summer of 1750, lie wrote a kind of tale, addressed to Lady Schaub and Miss Speed, who had made him a visit at Lady Cob- ham's.* The Elegy written in the Church yard was published by Dodsley Feb. 10, 1751, with a short advertisement by Mr. H. W., and im- mediately went through four editions. He had some thoughts of taking his Doctor's degree, but would not, for fear of being confounded with Dr. Grey, who published the foolish edition of Hudibras. " In March, 1753, was published a fine edition of his poems, with frontispieces, head and tail pieces, and initial letters, engraved by Grignion and Muller, after drawings of Richard Bentley, Esq. He lost his mother a little before this,t and at the same time finished an extreme fine poem, in imitation of Pindar, On the Power of Musical Poetry, which he began two or three years before, j In the winter of 1755, George Hervey, Earl of Bristol, who was soon afterwards sent Envoy to Turin, was designed for Minister to Lisbon : he offered to carry Mr. Gray as his * The Long Story. See Works, i. 111. ■)■ His mother died March 1 1, 1753. \ The Progress of Poesy. See Works, i. 22. C XXXIV MEMOIR Or GRAY. secretary, but he declined it. In August, 1757, was published two odes of Mr. Gray ; one, On the Power and Progress of Poesy, the other, On the Destruction of the Welsh Bards by Edward I. They were printed at the new press at Strawberry Hill, being the first production of that printing-house. In October, 1761, he made words for an old tune of Geniiniani, at the request of Mrs. Speed.* It begins, ' Thyrsis, when we parted, swore.' Two stanzas the thought from the J. >» VJ Zi LCl-LLi French." # # * * Song. See Works, i. 157 # CONTENTS. Gray to James West, Esq., May 8, 1736 Gray to Dr. Wharton, March 12, 1740 Gray to Mason, July 24, 1753 Gray to Mason, Sept. 21, 1753 Mason to Gray, Sept. 23, 1753 Gray to Mason, Sept. 26, 1753 Gray to Mason, Nov. 5, 1753 Mason to Gray, March 1, 1755 Mason to Gray, June 27, 1755 Mason to Gray, Sept. 10, 1755 Mason to Gray, Nov. 26, 1755 Mason to Gray, Dec. 25, 1755 Gray to Mason, 1756 Gray to Mason, July 25, 1756 Gray to Mason, July 30, 1756 Gray to Mason, Dec. 19, 1756 Gray to Mason, April 23, 1757 Gray to Mason, May — , 1 757 Gray to Mason, June Gray to the Rev. James Brown, July 25, 1757 Gray to Mason, August 1 Gray to the Rev. James Brown, August 14, 1757 Gray to Mr. Hurd, August 25, 1757 Gray to Mason Gray to Mason, Sept. 28, 1757 Gray to Mason, Oct. 13, 1757 Gray to Mason, Dec. 19, 1757 Gray to Mason, Jan. 3, 1758 Mason to Gray, Jan. 5, 1758 Gray to Mason, Jan. 13, 1758 Mason to Gray, Jan. 16, 1758 Gray to Mason, Jan. — , 1758 Mason to Gray, Jan. 22, 1758 PAGE 1 5 13 16 18 21 23 26 29 35 37 42 46 48 53 57 75 79 83 89 91 93 94 97 101 110 112 116 119 125 130 135 141 XXXV 1 CONTEXTS. Gray to -Mason, Good Friday, 1758 . Gray t<> Mason, June 20, 1758 Gray to Mason, August 11, 1758 Gray to the Rev. Mr. Browne, Sept, 7, 1758 Gray to the Rev. Mr. Browne, Oct. 28, 1758 Gray to Mason, Nov. 9, 1758 Mason to Gray, 1758 Gray to Mason, Jan. 18, 1759 Mason to Gray. Jan. 25, 1759 Gray to Mason, March 1, 1759 Gray to Mason, April 10, 1759 Gray to Mason, July 23, 1759 Gray to the Rev. James Brown, Aug. 8, 1759 Gray to the Rev. James Brown, Aug. 9, 1759 Gray to Mason, Oct. 6, 1759 Gray to the Rev. James Brown, 1759 Gray to Mason, Dec. 1, 1759 Gray to the Rev. James Brown, April, 1760 Gray to Mason, June 7, 1760 Gray to Mason, June 27, 1760 Gray to the Rev. James Brown, July, 1760 Gray to the Rev. James Brown, August, 1760 Gray to Mason, Aug. 7, 1760 Gray to the Rev. James Brown, Oct. 23, 1760 Gray to the Rev. James Brown, Oct. 25, 1760 (iray to the Rev. James Brown, Nov. 8, 1760 Mason to Gray, Nov. 28, 1760 Gray to Mason, Dec. 10, 1760 Mason to Gray, Jan. 8, 1761 Gray to Mason, Jan. 22, 1761 Gray to Mason, Feb. 5, 1761 Gray to the Rev. James Brown, Feb. 9, 1761 Gray to the Rev. James Brown, May 26, 1761 Gray to the Rev. James Brown, 1761 Mason to Gray, July 20, 1761 Gray to Mason, August, 1761 Gray to the Rev. James Brown, Sept. 24, 1761 Gray to Mason, Oct. 1761 Gray to the Rev. James Brown, Nov. 1761 PAGE 144 148 151 157 161 163 165 167 171 176 179 182 186 188 192 195 198 200 204 209 212 215 216 223 226 227 230 232 240 245 253 254 260 262 264 266 269 278 279 CONTENTS. XXXV 11 Gray to Mason, Dec. 8, 1761 Gray to Mason, Jan. 11, 1762 (tray to Mason, March 17, 1762 Gray to Mason, 1762 Gray to the Rev. James Brown, July 19, 1762 Gray to Mason, Dec. 21, 1762 Gray to the Rev. James Brown, Jan. 15, 1763 Gray to Mason, Feb. 8, 1763 Gray to Mason, March 6, 1763 Mason to Gray, June 28, 1763 Gray to Mason, 1763 Gray to Mason, 1764 Gray to the Rev. James Brown, Oct. 13, 1761 Gray to the Rev. James Brown, 1764 Gray to the Rev. James Brown, October 25, 1764 Gray to the Rev. James Brown, Oct. 29, 1764 Gray to Mason, May 23, 1765 Gray to Mason, July 16", 1765 Mason to Gray, July 22, 1765 Gray to the Rev. James Brown, Aug. 1765 Gray to the Rev. James Brown, 1765 Gray to Mason, 1765 Gray to Mason, 1765 Gray to Mason .... Gray to the Rev. James Brown, May 15, 1766 Gray to Mason, Oct. 5, 1766 Gray to Mason, Oct. 9, 1766 Gray to the Rev. James Brown, Oct. 23, 1766 Gray to the Rev. James Brown, Nov. 18, 1766 Gray to Mason, Jan. 27, 1767 Mason to Gray, Feb. 2, 1767 Gray to Mason, Feb. 15, 1767 Gray to Mason, March 28, 1767 Mason to Gray, April 1, 1767 Gray to Mason, May 23, 1767 Gray to the Rev. James Brown, June 2, 17'i~ Gray to the Rev. James Brown, June 6, 1767 Gray to Mason, June 6, 1767 Gray to Mason, July 10, 1767 PAUL 283 284 285 289 291 292 296 301 306 308 311 315 323 328 331 334 337 339 341 344 346 348 351 353 356 359 362 363 367 369 371 373 377 379 380 382 383 388 390 XXXV111 CONTENTS. Mason to Gray, July 15, 1767 Gray to Mason, July 19, 1767 Gray to Mason, July 26, 1767 Mason to Gray, July 27, 1767 Gray to Mason, Aug. 9, 1767 Gray to Mason, Sept. 11, 1767 Gray to the Rev James Brown, Oct. 31, 1767 Gray to Mason, Jan. 8, 1768 Gray to the Rev. James Brown, April 27, 1768 Gray to Mason, August 1, 1768 Mason to Gray, August 8, 1768 Gray to Mason, Sept. 7, 1768 Gray to Mason, December 29, 1768 Gray to Mason, August 26, 1769 Gray to the Rev. James Brown, Oct. 10, 1769 Gray to Richard Stonhewer, Esq. November 2, 1769 Gray to Mason, December 2, 1769 Gray to Mason, Dec. 14, 1769 Gray to Mason, 1770 Gray to the Rev. James Brown, May 22, 1770 Gray to Mason, Oct. 24, 1770 Mason to Gray, March 27 Mason to Gray, April 15, 1771 Gray to the Rev. James Brown Rev, Dr. Brown to the Rev. Norton Nicholls, July 26, 1771 Rev. Dr. Brown to the Rev. Norton Nicholls, Aug. 1, 1771 Rev. Dr. Brown to the Rev. Norton Nicholls, Sept. 6, 1771 Rev. Dr. Brown to the Rev. Norton Nicholls, June 29, 1773 Rev. Dr. Brown to the Rev. Norton Nicholls, July 24, 1773 Dr. Wharton to the Rev. William Mason, May 29, 1781 . Appendix : — No. I. Gray's Remarks on the Letters prefixed to Mason's Elfrida ...... No. II. The Character of Dr. John Brown, from the St. James's Chronicle . No. III. Biographical Notices of Charles von Bonstetten No. IV. French Anecdotes of Gray, from the Bibliotheque d'un Homme de Gout . . . . . Additional Notes ...... PAGE 391 396 398 400 404 406 409 411 415 418 420 422 425 430 432 433 434 436 437 439 442 445 448 454 457 458 460 461 463 464 467 470 476 482 484 LETTERS OF THE POET GRAY. LETTER I. TO JAMES WEST, ESQ. MY DEAR WEST, Cantabr. May 8, 1736. My letter enjoys itself before it is opened, in imagining the confusion you will be in when you hear that a coach and six is just stopped at Christ Church gates, and desires to speak with you, with a huddle of things in it, as different as ever met together in Noah's Ark ; a fat one and a lean one, and one that can say" a little with his mouth and a great deal with his pen, and one that can neither speak nor write. But you will see them ; joy be with you ! I hope too I shall shortly see you, at least in congratu- latione Oxoniensi. B A LETTERS OE My dear West, I more than ever regret you : it would be the greatest of pleasure to me to know what you do, what you read, how you spend your time, &c, and to tell you what I do not do, not read, and how I do not, for almost all the employment of my hours may be best explained by negatives. Take my word and experience upon it, doing nothing is a most amusing business, and yet neither something nor nothing give me any pleasure. For this little while last past I have been playing with Statius ; we yesterday had a game at quoits together. You will easily forgive me for having broke his head, as you have a little pique to him. E lib. 6 t0 Thebaidos, vs. 646—688. Then thus the King : — Adrastus. Whoe'er the quoit can wield, And furthest send its weight athwart the field, Let him stand forth his brawny arm to boast. Swift at the word, from out the gazing host, Young Pterelas with strength unequal drew, Labouring, the disc, and to small distance threw. The band around admire the mighty mass, A slipp'ry weight, and form'd of polish'd brass. The love of honour bade two youths advance, Achaians born, to try the glorious chance; A third arose, of Acarnania he, Of Pisa one, and three from Ephyre ; THE POET GRAY. 3 Nor more, for now Nesimachus's son, — f Hippomedon,J By acclamations roused, came tow'ring on. Another orb upheaved his strong right hand. Then thus: " Ye Argive flower, ye warlike band, Who trust your arms shall rase the Tyrian towers, And batter Cadmus' Avails with stony showers, Receive a worthier load; yon puny ball Let youngsters toss :" — He said, and scornful flung th' unheeded weight Aloof ; the champions, trembling at the sight, Prevent disgrace, the palm despair'd resign ; All but two youths th' enormous orb decline, These conscious shame withheld, and pride of noble line. J As bright and huge the spacious circle lay, With double light it beam'd against the day: So glittering shows the Thracian Godhead's shield, With such a gleam affrights Pangaea's field, When blazing 'gainst the sun it shines from far, And, clash'd, rebellows with the din of war. Phlegyas the long-expected play began, Summon'd his strength, and call'd forth all the man. All eyes were bent on his experienced hand, For oft in Pisa's sports, his native land Admired that arm, oft on Alpheus' shore The pond'rous brass in exercise he bore; Where flow'd the widest stream he took his stand ; \ Sure flew the disc from his unerring hand, Nor stopp'd till it had cut the further strand. And now in dust the polish'd ball he rolfd, Then grasp'd its weight, elusive of his hold ; Now fitting to his gripe and nervous arm, Suspends the crowd with expectation warm ; B 2 4* LETTERS OF Nor tempts he yet the plain, but hurl'd upright, Emits the mass, a prelude of his might ; Firmly he plants each knee, and o'er his head, Collecting all his force, the circle sped ; It towers to cut the clouds ; now through the skies Sings in its rapid way, and strengthens as it flies ; Anon, with slacken'd rage comes quiv'ring down, Heavy and huge, and cleaves the solid ground. So from th' astonish'd stars, her nightly train, The sun's pale sister, drawn by magic strain, Deserts precipitant her darken'd sphere: In vain the nations with officious fear Their cymbals toss, and sounding brass explore ; , Th' iEmonian hag enjoys her dreadful hour, And smiles malignant on the labouring power. ) I will not plague you too much, and so break the affair in the middle, and give you leave to resume your Aristotle instead of Your friend and servant, T. Gray.* * This letter may be compared by the reader with the one given under the same date (May 8, 1736) by Mason, from which it widely differs. The specimen of the translation from Statins here printed, precedes that which appeared in Mason, vol. ii. p. 12. The whole consisted of about 110 lines- Mason believes it was Gray's first attempt in English verse, and says that he had imbibed much of Dryden's spirited manner. This translation was written at the age of twenty. See for the other portion, Gray's Works, ed. Aid. vol. i. p. 126. THE POET GRAY. LETTER II. TO DR. WHARTON.* Florence, March 12, 1740. My dear, dear Wharton, (Which is a dear more than I give any body else. It is very odd to begin with a paren- thesis, but) yon may think me a beast, for not having sooner wrote f to yon, and to be sure a beast I am; now, when one owns it, I do not see what you have left to say. I take this oppor- tunity to inform you (an opportunity I have had every week this twelvemonth) that I ar- rived safe at Calais, and am at present at Mo- * Thomas Wharton, M.D. of Old Park, near Durham, Avho died in 1794, aged 77. With this gentleman Mr. Gray contracted an acquaintance very early, and, though they were not educated together at Eton, yet afterwards at Cam- bridge, when the Doctor was Fellow of Pembroke Hall, they became intimate friends, and continued so to the time of Mr. Gray's death. Dr. Wharton was a physician, and Richard Wharton, Esq. one of the Secretaries of the Treasury, and M.P. for Durham in 1802 and 180G, 1807, and 1812, Chair- man of the Ways and Means, also author of Fables from Dante, Berni, and Ariosto, imitated in English Verse, 1804, 8vo. was his second son, in whose possession Gray's Corres- pondence with his father remained, or at least by whose per- mission it was printed in 1816 f " Wrote," so the MS. Mason has " written." 6 LETTERS OF rence, a city in Italy in I do not know how many degrees north latitude. Under the Line I am sure it is not, for I am at this instant expiring with cold. You must know, that, not being certain what circumstances of my history would par- ticularly suit your curiosity, and knowing that all I had to say to you would overflow the narrow limits of many a good quire of paper, I have taken this method of laying before you the contents, that you may pitch upon what you please, and give me your orders accordingly to expatiate thereupon ; for I con- clude you will write to me, won't you ? oh yes, when you know, that in a week I set out for Home, and that the Pope is dead,* and that I shall be (I should say, God willing), if nothing extraordinary intervene, and if I am alive and well, and in all human probability, at the coro- nation of a new one. Now, as you have no other correspondent there, and as, if you do not, I certainly shall not write again (observe my impudence), I take it to be your interest to send me a vast letter full of all sorts of news and politics, and such other ingredients as to you shall seem convenient, with all decent expedi- tion. Only do not be too severe upon the Pre- * Clement XII. died on the 6th February 1740. THE POET GRAY. 7 tender ; and, if you like my style, pray say so ; — this is a la Frangoise, and if you think it a little too foolish and impertinent, you shall be treated alia Toscana, with a thousand Signoria Illuslrissima's : in the mean time I have the honour to remain, Your lofing frind tell deth, T. G. Proposals for printing by subscription, in THIS LARGE LETTER,* The Travels of T. G. Gentleman, which will consist of all the following particulars : — Chap. 1. — The author arrives at Dover ; his conversation with the mayor of that corpora- tion ; sets out in the pacquet boat ; grows very sick; with a very minute account of all the circumstances thereof ; his arrival at Calais ; how the inhabitants of that country speak French, and are said to be all Papishes ; the author's reflections thereupon. Chap. 2. — How they feed him with soupe, and what soupe is ; how he meets with a Capucin, and what a Capucin is ; how they shut him up * The MS. from which this is given differs in a few unim- portant particulars from that which is in the Aldine edition of (ii-ay's Letters, vol. ii. p. 83. O LETTERS OF in a postchaise and send him to Paris ; he goes wondering along during six days, and how there are trees and houses just as in England ; arrives at Paris without knowing it. Chap. 3. — A full account of the river Seine, and of the various animals and plants its borders produce ; a description of the little creature called an Abbe, its parts and their uses, with the reasons why they will not live in England, and the methods that have been used to propagate them there; a cut of the inside of a nunnery ; its structure wonderfully adapted to the use of the animals that inhabit it ; a short account of them, how they propagate without the help of a male, and how they eat up their own young ones, like cats and rabbits ; supposed to have both sexes in themselves, like a snail ; the dissection of a duchess, with some copper plates, very curious. Chap. 4. — Goes to the Opera, grand orchestra of humstrums, bagpipes, salt-boxes, tabors, and pipes ; the anatomy of a French ear, showing the formation of it to be entirely different from that of an English one, and that sounds have a directly contrary effect upon one and the other. Furinelli at Paris said to have a fine manner, but no voice; a grand ballet, in which there i- no s<-f Lady Jersey, was made secretary and registrar of the Right Honourable Order of the Bath. — See Mason's Life of Whitehead, p. 86. 38 LETTERS OF affair, and shall remain so. The only step I ever took which could he called active, was to write a letter to Mr. Bonfoy,* simply to inquire whether it was true that the Marquis f intended to take me next, which he has now answered in the affirmative ; hut, as Lowth is still to con- tinue first chaplain, the time when is uncertain, and cannot he these two years, in which space, you know, a man may die or do a hundred pretty things. But I hear, since I came into these parts, that Seward $ the critic is very anxious about taking my place, and has made offers of making over to me a great living in the Peak, if he may go in my stead (here too I preserve my passivity), it being totally indif- ferent to me whether they thrust me into the 5 Of Abbot's Ripton, Huntingdonshire. His name occurs several times in the Correspondence. He is mentioned by Walpole to West as being at Paris in April 1739, when Walpole and Gray were there. See note to Lett, xxxvn. of this volume, and a letter of the Rev. Mr. Jones, in Nichols's Lite- rary Anecdotes, vol. viii. p. 378. "All was attention and delight in Mr. Bonfoy's parlour, when he (Mr. Parnham) sang Mat. Prior's song," &c. f Marquis of Ilartington, Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, May 1 755, afterwards Duke of Devonshire. J The Rev. Thomas Seward, canon of Lichfield, and editor of Beaumont and Fletcher, lather of Anna Seward. The great living was, I presume, " Eyam," of which he was rector. THE POET Git AY. 39 Devil's A or an Irish bog. Yet, though I say I am indifferent to both these, I will in my present circumstances embrace either. The world has nothing to give me that I really care for ; therefore whatever she gives me, or how- ever she gives it, does not matter a rush, and yet I own I would have something more of her too, merely because I have not philosophy, or a better tiling, economy, to make what I have a competency. Whitehead has sent me some verses from Vienna,* treating of my indolence and other weighty matters, and exhorting me not to detach myself too much from the world. The verses are really very easy and natural, and I would transcribe them for you, if it was not too much trouble ; and yet you would not like them if I did, because of some words which I know would not digest upon your stomach, neither do they on mine. For I do not know how it is, but the slops you have given me have made my digestive faculties so weak, that several things of that sort, which were once as easy to me as hasty pudding, never get through * I do not see these verses in Whitehead's collected works. I possess a copy of the tragedy of (Edipus, left unfinished by Whitehead, and finished by Mason, privately printed at York, alluded to in the Garrick Correspondence, vol. ii. p. 90. TO LETTERS OE the first concoction, and lay as heavy in the prima via as toasted cheese, all which I impute to your nursery, where you would never let one eat any thing that was solid, as I did at St. John's. Write (you say) something stately at Aston ; * I write nothing there but sermons, and those I only transcribe. Write yourself, if you please ; at least finish your Welsh ode, and send it me to Hull ; for there is an alderman there that I want to give his opinion about it. But pray why, Mr. Gray, must I write, and you not ? Upon my word, Sir, I really do not mean it as a flattery or any thing of that sort ; no, Sir, I detest the insinuation ; but, blast my laurels, Sir, if I do not think you write vastly better than I do. I swear by Apollo, my dear Sir, that I would give all my Elfrida (Odes included) to be the author of that pretty Elegy that Miss Plumtree can say off book. And I protest to you that my Ode on Memory,! after it * Mason was instituted to the rectory of Aston, and ap- pointed chaplain to the Earl of Holdernesse, Nov. 1754. This living he held till his death, in 1797, when he was succeeded by the Rev. Christopher Alderson, who was followed by his son the Rev. William Alderson, who died in the autumn of 1852. f This ranks first of his Odes. In his Works, vol. i. p 10: ■ Alnllici f.l \\ isdom, thou whose s\va\ The thrbng'cl ideal hosts obey," &e. THE POET GRAY. 41 lias gone through all the lima? labor that our friend Horace prescribes, nay, Sir, prematur nonum m annum (above half of which time it has already, I assure you, been concealed malgre my partiality to it), — I say that that very Ode is not, nor ever will be, half so terse and com- plete as the fragment of your Welsh Ode,* which is, as one may say, now just warm from your brain, and one would expect as callow as a new- hatched chicken (pardon the barn-door simile). But all your productions are of a different sort; they come from you armed cap-a-pie, at all points, as Minerva is said to have issued from the head of Jupiter. I have thus said enough to show you, that, however I may have laid aside the practical part of poetry, I retain all that internal force, that ignea vis which in- spires every true son of Parnassus ; with all which 1 am fervently yours, W. Mason. Sec on the opening lines of it, Hurd's Dissertation on the Marks ol" Imitation, addressed to Mr. Mason, p. 190, which lines be traced to a passage in the Prolusiones of Strada. * The- Hard. 42 LETTERS OF LETTER XII. THE REV. WILLIAM MASON TO GRAY. DEAR SIR, Chiswick, Dec. 25, 1755. You desired me to write you news ; but, though there are a great many promotions, they seem to me, as far as I can judge, all such dirty ones, that you may spare me the trouble of naming them, and pick them out of a news- paper, if you think it worth while. There is a bon mot of Mr. Pitt's handed about, out of the late debate about the treaties.* Somebody had compared the Hussians to a star rising out of the north, &c. Pitt replied, he was glad the place of the star was thus fixed, for he was certain it was not that star which once appeared in the east, and which the wise men worshipped; though it was like it in one particular, for it made its worshippers bring gifts. Charles Townshend, in the same debate, called Lord Holland an unthinking, unparliamentary minis- * On the debate concerning the treaties, see Horace Wal- polc's Miscell. Letters, vol. iii. p. 170-183, at which he was present. It was in this debate that the Honour-able Mr. G. Hamilton made the famous speech, which now forms his pseudo-christian name; though he spoke again within a few months, and again shone. THE POET GRAY. 43 ter, for which lie was severely mumbled by Mr. Pox ; which I am glad of, because he is certainly a most unprincipled patriot. But perhaps all this is old to you ? I am tired of the subject, and will drop it. There is a sweet song in Demofoonte, called " Ogni amante," sung by Picciarelli.* Pray look at it; it is almost verbatim the air in Ariadne ; but I think better. I am told it is a very old one of Scarlatti's, which, if true, Handel is almost a musical Lauder. Voltaire's mock poem, called "La Pucelle,"t * Kicciarelli was a neat and pleasing performer, with a clear, flexible, and silver-toned voice, but so much inferior to Min- gotti, both in singing and acting, that he never was in very high favour. It was in the admirable drama of Demofoonte, that Mingotti augmented her theatrical consequence, and ac- quired much applause, beyond any period of her performance in England. — Dr. Burney's Hist, of Music, vol. iv. pp. 464-468. | A day or two before Voltaire's death, says Lacretelle, " Les hommes les plus distingues du royaume venaient tour-a- tour le soutenir; on baisait ses vetemens, on tombait a ses pieds. ' Vous voulez done,' dit le vieillard, 'me faire mourir de plaisir.' Ces acclamations le suivoient jusqu'a sa demeure. II s'entendait benir de tous ses ouvrages, de la Pucelle d 1 Orleans comme de la Henriade." See Hist. t. v. p. 159. " Voltaire was alarmed almost to insanity by the escape of his Pucelle d'Orleans, indiscreetly trusted to a female friend, which a person of the name of Grasset had grossly interpolated, and offered even to Voltaire himself for sale." Boaden's Life of II LETTERS OF is to he met with, though not sold puhlicly in town ; I had a short sight of it the other day. If you have any curiosity to see it, I can send it you, with Eraser's assistance, in a couple of covers. I have been here ever since I left Cambridge, except one opera night. My ab- sence from my pianoforte almost makes me peevish enough to write a Bolingbrokian Essay upon Exile. Why will you not send me my Inscription? and with it be sure add a disserta- tion upon Sigmas ; and tell me, with all Dr. Taylor's* accuracy, whether a % 3 or a C, or an G, is the most classical. You can write Disserta- tions upon the Pelasgi, and why not upon this, when it is for the use of a learned friend? Always twitting you (you say) with the Pelasgi. Why, it is all I can twit you with. I wish you good success at brag as well as sweet temper. May the latter be nOAY I1AKTIAOC AAYME- A EST EPA, and the former make your purse Kemble, vol. i. p. 137. On Gray's opinion of Voltaire, see NichoUs's Reminiscences of Gray, p. 33. His admiration of his genius (for he thought his tragedies next to Skakspere's) was united to an abhorence of his principles. * Dr. John Taylor, the very learned editor of Demosthenes, Lysias, and of the Marmor Sandvicense, which latter work is more immediately alluded to in this letter. See Memoirs of Taylor, collected and edited by J. Nichols, 1819, and Bp Monk's. Lii'e of Dent ley, vol. ii. p. 294. THE POET GRAY. 45 XPY2G XPTSOTEPA. I sec in tho papers Dodsley has published an Ode on the Earth- quake at Lisbon, with some Thoughts on a Churchyard. I suppose you are the author, and that you have tagged your Elegy to the tail of it ; however, if I do not suppose so, I hope the world will, in order that people may lay out their sixpences on that rather than on Dimcombe's * flattery to Eobus, and the old horse. What a scribbling humour am I in ! I will relieve you, however, by adding only my love to Mr. Brown, Tuthill, and all friends, and assuring you that I am yours with the greatest sincerity, Scroddles. Shall I trouble you, dear Sir, to wish Dr. Long and old Cardale a merry Christmas in my name ? Lady Ptochford assures me that Lady Coventry " has a mole on one of her ladyship's necks, * * * * * " * See Bell's Fugitive Poetry, vol. xviii. p. 91, for the Ode by J. Buncombe, M. A. to his Grace the Duke of Newcastle. A life of him may be found in Nichols's Literary Anecdotes, vol. viii. p. 271-278. He died at his living of Heme, near Canterbury, in Jan. 1786, aged 56. Fobus was the name by which the Duke of Newcastle is usually designated by Gray; and the old haye is George the Second, who is also praised in this ode. 40 LETTERS OF LETTER XIII. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. DEAR SKRODDLES, Pemb. Hall, Tuesday, 175G. If all the Greek you transcribe for me were poetry already, I would bestir myself to oblige you and Mr. Bivett;* but as it is no more than measured prose, and as unfortunately (in Eng- lish verse) a tripod with two ears or more has no more dignity than a chamber-pot with one, I do not see why you would have me dress it up with any florid additions, which it must have, if it would appear in rhyme ; nor why it will not prove its point as well in a plain prose translation as in the best numbers of Dryden. If you think otherwise, why do not you do it yourself, and consult me if you think fit ? I rejoice to hear the prints succeed so well, and am impatient for the work, but do not approve the fine-lady part of it; what business have such people with Athens ? I applaud your scheme for Gaskarth,t and wish it could have * Nicholas Rivett, the associate of Mr. J. Stuart in the measurement and delineation of the Antiquities of Athens. See memoir of him in Nichols's Literary Anecdotes, vol. ix. p. 147. Monthly Review, xlii. 369; hi. 193. f Joseph Gaskarth was treasurer of the College of Pem- broke; in 1747 he was the fifth senior wrangler. THE POET GRAY. 47 succeeded. He bears his disappointment like a philosopher, but his health is very bad. I have had the honour myself of some little grumblings of the gout for this fortnight, and yesterday it would not let me put on a shoe to hear the Frasi in, # so you may imagine I am in a sweet amiable humour ; nevertheless, I think of being in town (perhaps I may not be able to stir) the middle of next week, with Montagu. You are so cross-grained as to go to Tunbridge just before I come, but I will give you the trouble to inquire about my old quarters at Roberts's, if I can probably have a lodging at that time ; if not there, may be I can be in the Oven, which will do well enough for a sinner : be so good to give me notice, and the sooner the better. I shall not stay above a week, and then go to Stoke. I rejoice to know that the genial influences of the spring, which produce nothing but the gout in me, have hatched high and unimaginable fantasies in you. I see, me- thinks (as I sit on Snowdon), some glimpse of Mona and her haunted shades, and hope we shall be very good neighbours. Any Druidical anecdotes that I can meet with I will be sure to * An opera-singer not of the first rank. See Burney's History of Music, vol. iv. p. 452. She was pupil to Signor Brivio. 1-8 LETTERS OF send you. I am of your opinion, that the ghosts will spoil the picture, unless they arc thrown at a huge distance, and extremely kept down. The British Flag,* I fear, has hehaved itself like a trained-hand pair of colours in Bunhill Fields. I think every day of going to Switzer- land ; will you he of the party, or stay and sing mass at Aston ? Adieu ! I am stupid, and in some pain ; but ever very sincerely yours, T. G. LETTER XIV. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. Dear Mason, stoke, July 25th, 175c. I feel a contrition for my long silence, and yet perhaps it is the last thing you trouhle your head ahout ; nevertheless, I will he as sorry as if you took it ill. I am sorry too to see you so punctilious as to stand upon answers, and never to come near me till I have regularly left my f Allusion to the loss of Minorca and Admiral Byng's con- duct. See Mr. Pitt's letter to Mr. Grenville, June 5, 1756, on this subject — " Byng is gone to Gibraltar, and, if his own account does not differ widely from that of the French, // h lie ought to ;/o m it ',.- pretty evident," iY.C vol. i. p. 104. THE POET GRAY. 49 name at vour door, like a mercer's wife that imitates people who go a visiting. I would forgive you this, if you could possibly suspect I were doing any thing that I liked better, for then your formality might look like being piqued at my negligence, which has somewhat in it like kindness; but you know I am at Stoke, hearing, seeing, doing, absolutely no- thing, not such a nothing as you do at Tan- bridge, chequered and diversified with a succes- sion of fleeting colours, but heavy, lifeless, without form and void ; sometimes almost as black as the moral of Voltaire's Lisbon,* which * "Poeme sur la Desastre de Lisbon, 1755; ou, Examen de cet axiorae Tout est bien.'' See Poemes de Voltaire, torn. xii. p. 119. As Gray has alluded to the black moral of this poem, I may mention with the praise it richly deserves Professor Smyth's noble digression in his Lectures on the subject of these dangerous writings of Voltaire, and of the unhealthy regions of French literature. See vol. ii. p. 312 — 316. Voltaire in his Preface has endeavoured to defend his Moral; " L'Auteur du Poerne sur le desastre de Lisbonne ne combat pas l'illustre Pope (Essai sur l'Homme), qu'il a toujours admire et aim6; il pense comme lui sur presque tous les points; mais penetre du malheur des homines, il s'eleve contre les abus qu'on peut faire de cet ancien axiome ' Tout est Men.' 1 II adopte cette triste et plus ancienne verite, reconnue de tous les hommes, qiCil y a du mal sur la terre." See also Lettre xlii. a M. de Cideville, " II (Pope) prouve en beau vers, que la nature de rhnmme a toujours ete et toujours du etre ce quelle e,«t. Je E 50 LETTERS OF angers you so. I have had no more pores* and muscular inflations, and am only troubled with this depression of mind ; you will not expect therefore I should give you any account of my verve, which is at best, you know, of so delicate a constitution, and has such weak nerves, as not to stir out of its chamber above three days in a year, but I shall inquire after yours, and why it is off again ; it has certainly worse nerves than mine, if your reviewers have frighted it. Sure I (not to mention a score of your uncles f and aunts) am something a better judge than all the man midwives and presbyterian parsons that ever were born. Pray give me leave to ask you, do you find yourself tickled with the commendations of such people ? for you have your share of these too. I dare say not ; your vanity has certainly a better taste; and can, then, the censure of such critics move vou ? I own it is an impertinence in these gentry to talk of one at all either in good or in bad, but this we must all swallow; I mean not only we that write, but all the we's that ever did any thing suis bien etonne qu'un pretre Normand ose traduire de ces verites." * " pores " omitted in Mason. f " A score of your other critics." — Mason's edition. THE POET GRAY. 51 to be talked of.* 1 cannot pretend to be learned without books, nor to know the Druids from the Pelasgi at this distance from Cambridge. I can only tell you not to go and take the Mona for the Isle of Man ; it is Anglesey, a tract of plain country, very fertile, but picturesque only from the view it has of Caernarvonshire, from which it is separated by the Menai, a narrow arm of the sea. Forgive me for supposing in you such a want of erudition. I congratulate you on our glorious successes in the Mediterranean. Shall we go in time, and hire a house together in Switzerland? it is a fine poetical country to look at, and nobody there will understand a word we say or write, f Pray let me know what you are about ; what * Here Mason, in the MS., has written the following sen- tences (taken mostly from the preceding letter), which he ha9 ordered to be inserted in this place : " While I write I receive yours, and rejoice to find that the influences of this fine season, which produce nothing in me, have hatched high and unimaginable fancies in you. I see, methinks, as I sit on Snowdon, some glimpse of Mona and her haunted shades, and hope we shall be very good -neighbours. Any druidical anec- dotes that I can meet with I will be sure to send you when I return to Cambridge, but I cannot pretend to be learned without books, or to know the druids from modern bishops at this distance. I can only add — ." f Here the letter in Mason's edition ends. E 2 52 LETTERS OF new acquaintances you have made at Tun- bridge ; how you do in body and in mind ; believe me ever sincerely yours, T. G. Have vou readMadameMaintenon'sLetters?* v * These Letters were published, with a Life of the writer, by La Beaumelle, the great enemy and plague of Voltaire. See in Walpole and Mason Correspondence, i. 236, a French epigram on Beaumelle, Freron. and Voltaire. " This work," says Professor Smyth, " in spite of Voltaire, still keeps its place." See Lord Chesterfield's opinion of these Letters in vol. iv. p. 1 (Mrs. Stanhope's edition). " I am sure they are genuine; they both entertain'd and inform'd me." Colonel Johnes, of Hafod, published the Original Memoirs of Madame de Maintenon, with the various castrations and alterations, from Beaumelle's own copy. Voltaire in his Dic- tionnaire Philosophique, tome 1, p. 361, has argued against the correctness of these Memoirs, and also in his Siecle de Louis XIV. has written numerous notes against them. Horace Walpole confesses that two or three of these letters have made him jealous for his adored Madame de Sevigne. See on them the Edinburgh Review, No. Lxxxvm. by Sir James Mackintosh, and also Professor Smvth on the French Revolution, vol. L p. 18. Chaudon in his Dictionnaire Historique (art. Maintenon), thus accuses Beaumelle: "En publiant les Lettres, il y a fait quelquefois des chanjemens qui les rendent infidelles ; il fait dire a Madame de Maintenon des choses qu'ellen'a jamais pensees, et celles qu'elle a pensees d'une maniere dont elle ne les a jamais dites ; " and Barbier says, " La Beaumelle avoit prete a cette dame son bel esprit dans des courtes mais frequentes additions." Sr-e Bibl. d'un Homme de Gofit, vol. iv. p. 46. THE POET GRAY. 53 When I saw Lord John* in town, he said, if his brother went to Ireland you were to go second chaplain, but it seemed to me not at all certain that the Duke would return thither ; you pro- bably know by this time. LETTER XV. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. DEAR MASON, Stoke, July 30, Friday, 1756. I received your letters both at once yesterday, which was Thursday, such is the irregularity of our post. The affair of Southwell, at this time, is exceedingly unlucky ; if it is committed to you by all means defer it. It is even worth while to stop Mrs. Southwell, who will enter into the reason of it. Another thing is, you have very honestly and generously renounced your own interest (I mention it not as a compliment, hut pour la r arete dufaitj to serve Mr. Brown. But what if you might serve him still better by seemingly making interest for yourself ? Ad- dison must certainly be a competitor ; he will have the old (new) Lord Walpole, of Wolter- ton, his patron, to back him, the Bishop of * Lord John Cavendish. 54 LETTERS OF Chester,* the heads, who know him for a staunch man, and consequently the Duke of Newcastle. If you can divide or carry this interest, and by it gain the dirty part of the college, so as to throw it into Mr. Brown's scale at pleasure, perhaps it may produce an unanimous election. This struck me last night as a practicable thing, but I see some danger in it, for you may dis- oblige your own friends, and Lord Holdernesse must, I doubt, be acquainted with your true design, who very likely will not come into it. T. and also Mr. B. himself should be acquainted with it immediately ; consider therefore well whether this or the plain open way (which, I own, is commonly the best) be most likely to succeed ; the former, if it be found imprac- ticable for Mr. B., at least may make it sure for yourself, which is to be wished. In the next place (it is odd to talk thus to a man about himself, but I think I know to whom I am talking,) I have puzzled my head about a list of the college, and can make out only these ; pray supply it for me : Brown, Gaskarth, May, Cardale, Bedford, Milbourne, Tuthill,f * Dr. Edmund Keene, Master of St. Peter's College, Cam- bridge; and who, on resigning the Mastership, procured Dr. Law to be elected. He will be mentioned again, more fully. t f Ienry Tuthill, of St. Peter's Coll. ; admitted at Pembroke THE PPET GRAY. 55 Spencer, Forrester, Mapletoft, Delaval, Axton.* I do not knoAV if Spencer's Fellowship be vacant or not, or whether a majority only of the whole or two-thirds be required to choose a Master. I should hope nine of these, and perhaps Mapletoft too, if Gaskarth pleases, might be got for Mr. Brown, but I can answer only for T[uthill]. Bedford has always professed a friendship for Mr. B. but he is a queer man ; his patron is a Mr. Buller of Cornwall, a tory ; Delaval, Gaskarth, Milbourne, and Axton, you may soon inquire into yourself ; Spencer (if he is one) has promised Dr. Wharton. I write to Mr. "W.f (your neighbour over the Coll. 5 July, 1746; admitted Fellow 1748-9; deprived of his fellowship Feb. 2, 1757. Gray had a great regard for him, as may be seen by his early Letters. See his Works, vol. iii. pp. 47, 54 ; and the Letter to Dr. Wharton, dated 17 February, 1757, will shew the pain and suffering which Avere the conse- quence of this unhappy history. See note to Nichols' and Gray's Correspondence, ed. Aid. pref. p. viii. * These are the names of the Fellows of Pembroke. Dela- val and Cardale appear in the Cambridge Calendar as having taken wranglers' degrees in 1750-1, and Axton, a senior optime in 1755. Spencer, late Fellow of Pembroke, went to Trinity, and took his degree in 1750. Of Bedford and Mil- bourne 1 can give no account. t Horace Walpole, who lived in the same street as Mason, viz., Arlington Street. 56 LETTERS OF way) to desire him to speak to Mr. E. or the Duke of Bedford, if it may be of use, and add that if he will let you know he is at home you will come and give him any information neces- sary. Whether this will signify I cannot say, but I do not see any hurt it can do. I wish like you I were at Cambridge, but to hurry down on this occasion would be worse than useless, according to my conception. I am glad you think of going, if they approve it. Dr. Long, if he is not dead, will recover,* — mind if he don't. I leave my answer to your first letter to another opportunity, and am always yours, T. G. * He did recover, and lived till Dec. 16, 1770, when he was in his 92d year. In his 88th year he was put in nomi- nation for the office of Vice Chancellor. He appears in Churchill's "Candidate:" " Comes Sumner, wise and chaste as chaste can be, With Long as wise, and not less chaste than he." In the Gent. Mag. List of Deaths, 1770, is Roger Long, aged 91. See Gray's Letters to Mr. Cole on Dr. Long's funeral, in Works, vol. iv. p. 194, and p. 196. THE POET GRAY. 57 LETTER XVI. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. DEAR SKRODDLES, Dec. 19, 1756. # # # # ^j ie man ' s name j s Joannes Geor- gius Erickius, Commentatio de Dmidis: acce- dunt Opuscula quaedani rariora, historiam et antiquitates Druidarum illustrantia itemque Scriptorum de iisdem Catalogus.* It was pub- lished at Ulni, 1744, 4to., and in the Nova Acta Eruditoruin (printed at Leipsic for 1745), there is some account of it. The rare little works which make the second part of it, are, Peter L'Escalopier's Theologia Vett m . Gal- lorum ; Caesar. Bulacus, in Historia, Vett m . Acadeiniarum Gallise Druidicarum ; and two or three more old flams. I do not know what * Joannis Georgii Frickii, Joan. pi. rov yuarap/rov, A. M. ad sed. S.S. Trinit. Ulm. Pastoris et Gymnas. Visitatoris, itemque Societ. Teutonics Leipsicis Sodalis, Commentatio de Druidis Occident alium Populorum Philosopkis, multo quam antea auctior et emendatior. Accedunt Opuscula qufedam rariora Hist, et Antiq. Druidum illustrantia, itemque Scrip- torum de eisdem Catalogus. Recensuit, singula digessit, ac in lucem edidit frater germanus, Albertus Frickius, A. M. V. D. M. Prof. P. P. et Bibliotk. Adj. Ulm. itemque M. Prof. P. P. et &c. Ulma?, 1744, 4to. See Nov. Act. Eruditorum, vol. Ixiv. p. 237, Mens. Junii, 1745, p. 1. 58 LETTERS OF satisfaction you will find in all this, having never seen the book itself. I find a French book commended and cited by Jaques Martin upon the Religion of the Ancient Gauls. Over leaf you will find a specimen of my Lord Duke of Norfolk's housekeeping. I desire you would inquire of Mr. Noble, or somebody, what the same provisions would cost now-a-days. I send you a modern curiosity inclosed, a specimen of sturdy begging, which cost me half- a-guinea; if he writes so to strangers, what must he do to particular friends like you. Pray learn a style and manner against you publish your Proposals. Odikle* is not a bit grown, though it is fine mild open weather. Bell Seiby has dreamed that you are a Dean or Prebendary ; I write you word of it, because they say a w 's dreams are lucky, especially with regard to church pre- ferment. You forget Mr. Senhouse's acoustic warm- ing-pan : we are in a hurry, for I cannot speak to him till it comes. God bless you, come and bring it with you, for we are as merry as the day is short. The squire is gone ; he gave us a goose and a turkey, and two puddings of a moderate size. Adieu, dove, I am ever yours. * The Bard. THE POET GRAY. 59 Gaskyn, and the Viper, &c. desire their civilities. What prevys, marlings, and oxbirds are I cannot tell, no more than I can tell how to make Stoke fritters ; leche is blanc-manger ; wardyns are baking-pears ; doyse are does. Do not think they lived thus every day. If you would know how they eat on meagre days and in ordinary I will send you word. I shall only add that Lord Surrey loved buttered lyng and targets of mutton for breakfast; and my Lady's Grace used to piddle with a chine of beef upon brewess. You will wonder what I mean by the half- guinea I talked of above ; it was a card from Mr. E rankling, which I meant to inclose, but cannot find it high or low. Chrystmas Day. s. d. Empt: — Item, 35 malards, 2\d. a-pece . 7 3 Item, 55 wigyns, 2d. a-pece . 10 2 Item, 38 teles, id. a-pece . 4 9 Item, 2 corlewys ..... 1 Item, 2 prevys,* 2c?. a-pece . 4 * " Prevys" may be the " pivier," or golden plover ; "mar- lyngs," the " morinellus," or dotterel. The " purre," Tringa cinclus, is called provinciatty the oxbird, a species of sand- piper. GO LETTERS OF s. d. Item, 2 plovers, 2d. a-pece Item, 8 "woodcocks, 3d. a-pece Item, 42 marly ngs, \d. a-pece Item, 42 rede-shanks, \d. a-pece Item, 17 doz. and \ oxbyrdys, 3c?. a Item, 40 grete byrdys, \d. a-pece Item, 40 small byrdys, Ad. a doz. Item, 11 pyggs Item, 200 eggs, 8d. Item, 31 cople conyse, fett at bery* doz. 4 2 1 9 1 9 4 4 1 8 10 3 8 2 8 10 4 Presents : — 10 cople teles, 3 cople wegyns, 4 cople se-pyse, 8 malards, 3 doz. snytts, 5 doz. oxbyrdys, 6 se-mewys, 2 swanys, 2 pecocks, 14 partridges, 4 woodcoks, 15 doyse, 4 gallons crenie, 6 gall, cord, a hundred \ of wardyns, a bushell apples. Breakfast, to my Ladyse Grace: Braune, and a capon stuyd. To my Lord's Grace, a Crystmas-day dyner : First course (the Duke and Duchess and 24 persons to the same), the borys hede, brawne, pottage, a stuyd capon, a bake-mett with twelve birdys, rostyd vele, a swane, two rostyd capons, a custerde, Stoke- fritter, leeche. (Second course) : Gely, three conyse, five teles, a pekoke, twelve rede-shanks, * Thirty-one couple of conies, taken at the burrow ; Bery, or berrie, means burrow. Thus Dryden : — " The theatres are berries for the fair." THE POET GRAY. 01 12 small byrdys, 2 pastyse veneson, a tarte, gynger-brede. (To the Bordys end) : Brawne, a stuyd capon, a bakyd cony, rostyd vele, half a swane, custerde, leche. (Rewarde) : Gely, 2 conyse, 4 teles, 12 small byrdys, a pasty venison, a tarte. There was also a table for the gentlewomen, and 12 persons to the same, and the servants table or tables, at which sate 28 gentlemen, 60 yeomen, 44 gromes, and gentlemen's servants ; the meats were much the same with the former. One day this Christmas I see there were 347 people dined at the lower tables. The whole expense of the week (exclusive of wine, spices, salt, and sauce, &c.) amounted to 31/. 9s. 6jd. Ode, p. 32.* — "Whom Camber bore." I sup- * Gray now begins a criticism on the Ode in Mason's Caractacus : " Hail, thou harp of Phrygian fire ! In years of yore that Camber bore," &c. See Mason's Works, vol. ii. p. 110. In a note in his Ode on the Hon. William Pitt, 4to., 1782, Mason says, " The poem of Caractacus was read in MS. by the late Earl of Chatham, who honoured it with an approbation which the author is proud to record." 62 LETTERS OF pose you say "whom" because the harp is treated as a person ; but there is an ambiguity in it; and I should read "that Camber bore." There is a specimen of nice criticism for you ! I much approve the six last lines of this stanza ; it is a noble image, and well expressed to the fancy and to the ear. I. 2. — A rill has no tide of waters to " tumble down amain." I am sorry to observe this just in a place where I see the difficulty of rhyming. I object nothing to the " Symphony of ring- doves and poplars," but that it is an idea borrowed from yourself: and I would not have you seem to repeat your own inventions. I conceive the four last lines to be allegorical, alluding to the brutal ferocity of the natives, which by the power of music was softened into civility. It should not, therefore, be the "wolf- dog," but the "wolf" itself, that bays the trembling moon ; it is the wolf that thins the flocks, and not the dog, who is their guardian. I. 3.— I read "The Fairy Fancy." I like all this extremely, and particularly the ample plumes of Inspiration, that " Beat on the breathless bosom of the air." Yet, if I were foolish, I could find fault with this verse, as others will do. But what I do THE POET GRAY. 63 not conceive is, how such wings as those of In- spiration should he mistaken for the wings of Sleep, who (as you yourself tell me presently) "sinks softly down the skies ;" besides, is not " her " false English ? the nominative case is " she." II. 3. — This belongs to the second epode. Does the swart-star (that is, Sirius,) shine from the north ? I believe not. But Dr. Long will tell you. II. 2. — These are mv favourite stanzas. I am satisfied, both mind and ear, and dare not murmur. If Mador would sing as well in the first chorus, I should cease to plague you. Only — " Rise at her art's command " is harsh, and says no more than " Arise at her command," or " Are born at her command." II. 3. — I told you of the swart-star before. At the end I read, " Till Destiny prepare a shrine of purer clay." Afterwards read, "Resume no more thy strain." You will say I have no notion of tout-ensembles, if I do not tell vou that I like the scheme of this ode at least as well as the execution. 64 LETTERS OF And now I rejoice with you in the recovery of your eyes ; pray learn their value, and be sparing of them.* I shall leave this place in about a fortnight, and within that time hope to despatch you a packet with my criticalities entire. I send this bit first, because vou desire it. Dr. Wharton is in great hopes that Mr. Hurd will not treat Dr. Akenside so hardly as he intended, and desires you would tell him so, as his request is founded on mere humanity (for he pretends no friendship, and has but a slight acquaintance with the doctor).! I pre- * Mason's eyes were weak, a complaint that lasted more or less through his life. The place in his library was pointed out to me by Mr. Alderson, where he usually sate and wrote, and which was the. most distant from the light. His poetical chair — sedes beata — was kindly bequeathed to me ; and I have left it by will to the Poet laureate of the day, that it may rest among the sacred brotherhood : — " lEetumque choro Poeana canentes, Inter odoratum Lauri nemus." f In one of Mason's manuscript papers, I found the fol- lowing note relating to a celebrated passage in Akenside : — " Edward Maurice, Bishop of Ossory, left behind him a manuscript dramatic poem, of which the life of David was the subject. It is with other writings of his preserved among the MSS. at Trinity College, Dublin. The author of Letters between Henry and Frances (Mrs. Griffiths), in Letter THE POET GRAY. 65 sent it to you, and wish you would acquaint Mr. Hurd with it, the sooner the hotter. I am well and stupid, hut ever unalterably yours, T. G. I do not understand if Fraser is recovered ; I 498, has published the following extract from it. The coin- cidence is curious : — " Abishai. " Has God then two anointed, to confound Suspended loyalty ? as when the sun, The god of eastern lands, imprints his ray On a cloud's compact vapour, and thence shines Another sun — the trembling priest aghast All doubtful stands, unknowing where to send The odour of his incense." Akenside says that when nature and her copy made by per- fect art are brought into comparison " Applauding love Doubts where to choose, and mortal man aspires To tempt creative praise, as when a cloud Of gathering hail with limpid crusts of ice, Inclos'd and obvious to the beaming sun, Collects his large effulgence ; straight the heavens With equal flames present on either land The radiant visage; Persia stands at gaze Appalled, and on the brink of Ganges doubts The snowy-vested seer, in Mithra's name To which the fragrance of the south shall burn, To which his warbled orizons ascend." Pleasures of the Imagination, b. iii. v 4 27. F 66 LETTERS OE wish he was. Do you know any thing of Ston- hewer ? P. 2. — I liked the opening as it was origi- nally better than I do now, though I never thoroughly understood " how blank he frowns." And as to " black stream," it gives me the idea of a river of mud.* I should read "dark stream," imagining it takes its hue only from the rocks and trees that overhang it. " These cliffs, these yawning," &c. comes in very well where it stood at first, and you have only removed it to another place, where, by being somewhat more diffused, it appears weaker. You have intro- duced no new image in your new beginning but one, " utters deep wailings," which is very well : but as to a " trickling runlet," I never heard of such a thing, unless it were a runlet of brandy. Yet I have no objection at all to the reflec- tion Didius makes on the power objects of the sight have over the soul ; it is in its place, and might even be longer, but then it should be more choicely and more feelingly expressed. He must not talk of dells and streams only, * Mason has, in accordance with Gray's criticism, given, " How stern he frowns," and the " dark stream." The " trick- ling runlet" has entirely disappeared. THE POET GRAY. 67 but of something more striking, and more cor- responding to the scene before him. Intellect is a word of science, and therefore is inferior to any more common word. P. 3. — For the same reason I reject " philo- sophy," and read " studious they measure, save when contemplation," &c. and here you omit two lines, relating to astronomy, for no cause that I discern. P. 4. — What is your quarrel to " shallops?" I like " Go bid thine eagles soar," perhaps from obstinacy, for I know you have met with some wise gentleman who says it is a false thought, and informs you that these were not real eagles, but made of metal or wood painted. The word " seers," comes over too often : here, besides, it sounds ill. Elidurus need not be so fierce. " Dost thou insult us, Roman ?" was better be- fore. Sure " plan'd" is a nasty stiff word. P. 6. — It must be Caesar* and Fate; the name of Claudius carries contempt with it. P. 7.— " Brother, I spurn it, better than I scorn it. Misjudging Boy !" is weaklv. He calls him coward because such * So it is printed, " Caesar and Fate demand him at your hand." F 2 (}S LETTERS OF a reproach was most likely to sting him. " I'll do the deed myself," is holder, more resolute, more hearty, than the alteration. " Lead forth the saintly," &c. hetter, shorter, and more lively at first. " What have I to do with purple rohes and arraignments?" — like a trial at York assizes. P. 8. — " Try, if 'twill bring her deluging," &c. hetter so, only I do not like " strait justice :" " modest mounds " is far worse. P. 9. — " Do this and prosper, hut pray thee," &c. Oh ! how much superior to the cold lines for which you would omit them. It is not you but somebody else that has been busy here and elsewhere. " Come from their caves." I read, " Are issuing from their caves. Hearest thou yon signal ?" and put " awful " where it was before. " I'll wait the closing," &c. Leave it as it was. " Do thou as likes thee best, betray, or aid me:" it is shorter and more sulky. Elidurus too must not go off in silence ; and what can he say better ? P. 10. — I do not dislike the idea of this cere- mony, but the execution of it is careless and hasty. The reply of the Semi-chorus is stolen from Dry den's CEdipus, which, perhaps, you never saw, nor I since I was a boy, at which time it left an impression on my fancy. Pray THE POET GRAY. 69 look at it. This "dread ground " breaks my teeth. " Be it worm, or aske, or toad :" these are things for fairies to make war upon but not Druids, at least they must not name them. An aske* is something I never heard of. "Eull five fathom under ground." Consider, five fathom is but thirty feet ; many a cellar lies deeper. f I read, " Gender'd by the autumnal moon ;" by its light I mean. " Conjoined " is a bad word. " Supernal art profound " is negligent. Indeed I do not understand the image, how the snakes in copulation should heave their egg to the sky ; you will say it is an old British fancy. I know it of old ; but then it must be made picturesque, and look almost as if it were true. P. 13. — "Befit such station." The verse wants a syllable. " Even in the breast of Mona," read " the heart of Mona." " Catches fresh grace;" the simile is good, but not this expres- sion. The Tower is more majestic, more vene- rable, not more graceful. I read, " He looks as doth the Tower After the conflict of Heaven's angry bolts ; Its nodding walls, its shatter'd battlements, * " Asker," in old language, was a water-newt, which Ma- >. mi probably meant. \ " Twice twelve for them under ground." So Edd. 70 LETTERS OF Frown with a dignity unmark'd before, Ev'n in its prime of strength."* P. 13. —I do not desire he should return the Druid's salute so politely. Let him enter with that reflection, " This holy place, &c." and not stand upon ceremony. It required no altera- tion, only I hate the word " vegetate," and would read, " Tell me, Druid, Is it not better to be such as these Than be the thing I am?" I read, too, " Nor show a Praetor's edict," &c. and "pestilent glare," as they were before. Add, too, " See to the altar's base the victims led," &c. And then, whether they were bulls or men, it is all one. I must repeat again, that the word " Seers " is repeated for ever. P. 15. — " I know it, rev'rend Fathers," &c. This speech is sacred with me, and an example of dramatic poetry. Touch not a hair of its head, as you love your honour. * The text of Mason stands thus : " He looks, as doth the Tower, whose nodding walls, After the conflict of Heaven's angry bolts, 1- 1 own with a dignity unmark'd before, Ev'n in its power of strength." THE POET GRAY. 71 P. 16. I had rather some of these person- ayes, " Resignation, Peace, Revenge, Slaughter, Ambition," were stript of their allegorical garb.* A little simplicity here in the expression would better prepare the high and fantastic strain, and all the unimaginable harpings that follow. I admire all from " Eager to snatch thee, &c." down to the first epode of the chorus. You give these Miltonic stanzas up so easily that I begin to waver about Ma-dor's song. If you have written it, and it turn out the finest thing in the world, I rejoice, and say no more. Let it come though it were in the middle of a ser- mon ; but if not, I do confess, at last, that the chorus may break off, and do very well without a word more. Do not be angry at the trouble I have given you ; and now I have found the reason why I could not be pleased with Mador's philosophic song. The true lyric style, with all its flights of fancy, ornaments, and height- ening of expression, and harmony of sound, is in its nature superior to every other style ; which is just the cause why it could not be * Chorus. " that Resignation meek, That dove-ey'd Peace, handmaid of Sanctity, Approached the altar with thee ; 'stead of these See I not gaunt Revenge, ensanguined Slaughter, And mad Ambition, &c." 72 LETTERS OF borne in a work of great length, no more than the eye could bear to see all this scene that we constantly gaze upon, — the verdure of the fields and woods, the azure of the sea and skies, turned into one dazzling expanse of gems. The epic, therefore, assumed a style of graver colours, and only stuck on a diamond (borrowed from her sister) here and there, where it best became her. When we pass from the diction that suits this kind of writing to that which belongs to the former, it appears natural, and delights us ; but to pass on a sudden from the lyric glare to the epic solemnity (if I may be allowed to talk nonsense) has a very different effect. We seem to drop from verse into mere prose, from light into darkness. Another thing is, the pauses proper to one and the other are not at all the same ; the ear therefore loses by the change. Do you think if Mingotti stopped in the middle of her best air, and only repeated the remaining verses (though the best Metas- tasio ever wrote), that they would not appear very cold to you, and very heavy? P. 24.—" Boldly dare " is tautology. P. 27. — " Brigantum :" there was no such place. P. 28. — " The sacred hares." You might as well say "the sacred hogs." THE POET GRAY. 73 P. 29. — There is an affectation in so often using the old phrase of " or ere " for " before." P. 30. — " Hack" is the course of the clouds, " wreck " is rain and destruction. Which do you mean ? I am not yet entirely satisfied with the conclusion of this fine allegory. " That blest prize redeem' d " is flatly expressed; and her sticking the pages over the arch of her bower is an idea a little burlesque ; besides, are we sure the whole is not rather too long for the place it is in, where all the interests of the scene stand still for it ? and this is still drawn out further by the lines you have here put into the mouth of Caractacus. Do not mistake me ; I admire part of it, and approve almost all ; but consider the time and place. P. 31. — " Pensive Pilgrim." Why not ? there is an impropriety in " wakeful wanderer." I have told you my thoughts of this chorus already ; the whole scheme is excellent, the 2d strophe and antistrophe divine. Money (I know) is your motive, and of that I wash my hands. Eame is your second consideration ; of that I am not the dispenser, but if your own approba- tion (for every one is a little conscious of his own talents) and mine have any weight with you, you will write an ode or two every year, till vou are turned of fifty, not for the world, 74 LETTERS OF but for us two only; we will now and then give a little glimpse of them, but no copies. P. 37. — I do not like " maidenhood." P. 38. — Why not " smoke in vain," as before? the word " meek" is too often repeated. P. 42. — The only reason why you have altered my favourite speech is, that " surging and plunging," " main and domain," come too near each other ; but could not you correct these without spoiling all ? I read " Cast his broad eye upon the wild of ocean, And calm'd it with a glance ; then, plunging deep His mighty arm, pluck'd from its dark domain," &c. Pray have done with your " piled stores and coral floors." P. 43.— " The dies of Pate," that is, " the dice of Pate." Pind out another word. P. 44. — I cannot say I think this scene im- proved : I had no objection before, " but to harm a poor wretch like me; " and what you have inserted is to me inferior to what it was meant to replace, except p. 47, " And why this silence," which is very well; "the end of the scene is one of my favourite passages. P. 49. — Why scratch out " Thou, gallant boy " ? I do not know to what other scene you have transferred these rites of lustration, but THE POET GRAY. 75 metliinks they did very well here. Arvira- gus's account of himself I always was highly pleased with. P. 51. — " Fervid" is a bad word. LETTER XVII. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. Dear Mason, April 23, 1757. I too am set down here with something greater hopes of quiet than I could entertain when I saw you last ; at least nothing new has happened to give me any disturbance, and the assurances you gave me in your letter from hence are pretty well confirmed by experience. I shall be very ready to take as much of Mr. Delap's * dulness as he chooses to part with at * Mr. or Dr. Delap was curate in his earlier life to Mason at Aston in 1756. The first entry of his name appears in a maiTiage 14 Nov. 1756, his last signature in May 1758. In 1759 he was succeeded by Mr. John Wood. His portrait I have seen in the dining-room at Aston rectory, and it is now in Mrs. Alderson's possession. There are some verses of his writing in Bell's Fugitive Poetry, vol. viii. p. 52. He was the author of a tragedy, Hecuba, acted with very indifferent success at Drury Lane Theatre in 1762, and " The Captives," which was endured for three nights and then 70 LETTERS OF any price he pleases, even with his want of sleep and weak bowels into the bargain ; and I will be your curate, and he shall live here with all niy wit and power of learning. Dr. Brown's book * (I hear) is much admired in was gathered to its fathers. See Boaden's Life of Kemble, i. p. 325. Baker mentions him and his tragedy in the Bio- graphia Dramatica, vol. i. p. 121 ; vol. ii. p. 147; but he only knew that he was a clergyman. Some account of Dr. Delap's person and conversation may be found in Madame D'Arblay's Memoirs, vol. i. p. 201-229, during a visit he paid to Mrs. Thrale, at Brighthelmstone. See also vol. ii. p. 421-2, &c. In a letter to Dr. Wharton, Gray writes, " Poor Mason is all alone at Aston, for his curate is gone to be tutor to some- body." His preferments and works may be seen in Nichols's Anecdotes, vol. ix. p. 9. This is the well-known " Estimate of the Manners and Principles of the Times," by Dr. John Brown, a book which occupied for a time a very large share of public attention and applause; several editions were called for in the course of a year, and a second volume followed the first. The reader, if his curiosity on the author and his works is awakened, may consult Walpole's Miscellaneous Letters, vol. hi. p. 352, and vol. vi. p. 74; Cavendish's Debates, ii. p. 106; Walpole's History of George III. ii. p. 79; Smollett's History, ii. p. 289; and Monthly Review, 17G4, part i. p 300; Nichols's Literary Anecdotes, ii. p. 211; viii. p. 244; ix. p. 809; and the Bio- graphia Britannica, art. Brown (not Browne.) This work was well answered by Dr. Wallace of Edin- burgh, in the Characteristics of the Present State of Great Britain. See also Professor Smyth'.'- Lectures on Modern His- THE POET Gil AY. 77 town, which I do not understand. I expected it would he admired here ; but they affect not to like it, though I know they ought. What would you have me do ? There is one thing in it I applaud, which is the dissertation against trade, for I have always said it was the ruin of the nation. I have read the little wicked book about Evil,* that settled Mr. Dodsley's conscience in that point, and find nothing in it but absurdity : we call it Soame Jenyns's, but I have a notion you mentioned some other name to me, though I have forgotten it. Ston- tory, ii. p. 289. There is a similar complaint of the degene- racy of the times in Cowper's Task, book ii. (Time Piece.) all that we have left is empty talk Of old atchievements, and despair of new. When Brown complained in this work of the " dry, unaf- fecting compositions of the Cambridge Writers, the Critical Review asked him if he had not forgotten some of his friends, Hurd, Gray, Mason," &c. vol. v. p. 314. — See Monthly Review, vol. xviii. p. 354-374, for a very severe review of the second volume. In the St. James's Mag. 1762, vol. iii. p. 232, is a pungent epigram on the Estimate, and on Brown's flattery of Warburton, beginning " A vast colossus made of brass," &c. Dr. Brown will be mentioned again. * The Origin of Evil, by Soame Jenyns. On this work see the Notes to Walpole and Mason's Correspondence, by the Editor, vol. i. p. 438-9. The well-known review by Dr. Johnson is in every edition of his works. 78 LETTERS OF hewer has done me the honour to send me vour friend Lord Nunehani * hither, with a fine re- commendatory letter written by his own desire, in Newmarket-week. Do not think he was going to Newmarket; no, he came in a solitaire, great sleeves, jessamine-powder, and a large bouquet of jonquils, within twelve miles of that place, on purpose not to go thither. We had three days' intercourse, talked about the beaux arts, and Rome, and Hanover, and Ma- son, — whose praises we celebrate a qui mieux mieux, — vowed eternal friendship, embraced, and parted. I promised to write you a thousand compliments in his name. I saw also Lord Villiers and Mr. Spencer, who carried him back with them ; en passant, they did not like me at all. Here has been too the best of all Johns f (I hardly except the Evangelist and the Di- vine), who is not, to be sure, a bit like my Lord Nuneham, but full as well, in my mind. The Duke of Bedford % has brought his son, § * Compare Gray's Letter to Dr. Wharton, Apr. 17, 1757, in Works, vol. iii. p. 159, ed. Aid. f Lord John Cavendish. % " The Duke of Bedford is now here to settle his son at Trinity, and Mr. Rigby is come to assist them with Lis ad- vice." See Letter to Dr. Wharton, vol. iii. p. 159. § Francis Marquess of Tavistock, of Trinity College, M.A. 1759; he died before his father in 17G7. THE POET GRAY. 79 aye, and Mr. lligby too ; they were at church on Sunday morning, and Mr. Sturgeon preached to them and the heads,* for nobody else was present. Mr. P n is not his tutor. t These are the most remarkable events at Cambridge. Mr. Bonfoy has been here ; he had not done what you recommended to him before he came out of town, and he is returned thither only the beginning of this week, when he assured me he certainly would do it. Alas ! what may this delay occasion; it is best not to think. Oh happy Mr. Delap ! Adieu, my best Mason ; I am pleased to think how much I am obliged to you, and that, while I live, I must be ever yours. LETTER XVIII. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. DEAR MASON, Cambridge, Tuesday May . ., 1757. You are so forgetful of me, that I should not forgive it, but that I suppose Caractacus may be the better for it ; yet I hear nothing from * Roger Sturgeon, M.A. Fellow of Caius. f Perhaps Franklin, who was of that College, and Greek Professor in 1750. 80 LETTEUS OF him neither, in spite of his promises. There is no faith in man, no, not in a Welch-man, and yet Mr. Parry has been here and scratched out such ravishing blind harmony, such tunes of a thousand years old, with names enough to choke you, as have set all this learned body a-dancing, and inspired them with due reverence for Odikle, whenever it shall appear. Mr. Parry (you must know ) it was that has put Odikle in motion again, and with much exercise it has got a tender tail grown, like Scroddles, and here it is ; if you do not like it, you may kiss it. You remember the " Visions of Glory," that descended on the heights of Snowdon, and un- rolled their glittering skirts so slowly.* Antist. 3. Haughty knights and barons bold, With dazzling helm and horrent spear, And gorgeous dames and statesmen old, Of bearded majesty, appear; In the midst a form divine : Her eye proclaims her born of Arthur's line, Her lion-port, her awe-commanding face, Attemper'd sweet to virgin grace. What strings symphonious tremble in the air, What strains of vocal transport round her play ! * Compare this copy of the unfinished text of The Bard with one sent to Dr. Wharton, and which varies from this in several places. See Aid. ed. Gray's Works, vol. iii. p. 13G, &c. THE POET GRAY. 81 Hear, from the grave, great Taliesin, hear! They breathe a soul to animate thy clay. Bright Rapture wakes, and, soaring as she sings, Waves in the eye of Heaven her many-coloured wings. Epope 3. The verse adorn again Fierce War and faithful Love, And Truth severe, by fairy Fiction drest. In mystic measures move Pale Grief and pleasing Pain, With Horror* wild that chills the throbbing breast. A voice, as of the Cherub choir, Gales from blooming Eden bear, And distant warblings lessen on my ear, That lost in long futurity expire. Fond, impious man ! think'st thou yon sanguine cloud, Rais'd by thy breath, has quench'd the orb of day ? To-morrow he repairs the golden flood, And warms the nations with redoubled ray. Enough for me, with joy I see The different doom our Fates assign: Be thine Despair, and sceptred Care; To triumph and to die are mine ! He spoke, and headlong from the mountain's height, Deep in the roaring tide he sunk to endless night. f * " tyrant of the," in Mason's writing. * The Moses of Parmegiano, and Raphael's figure of God in the vision of Ezekiel, are said by Mr. Mason to have fur- nished Gray with the head and action of his Bard ; if that was the case, he would have done well to acquaint us with the Poet's method of making Placidis coire immitia. — Fuseli's Lectures, ii. G 82 LETTERS OF I arti well aware of many weakly things here, but I hope the end will do. Pray give me your full and true opinion, and that not upon deli- beration, but forthwith. Mr. Hurd * himself allows that "lion-port" is not too bold for Queen Elizabeth. All here are well, and desire their respects to you. I read yesterday of a canonry of Worcester vacant in the newspaper. Adieu, dear Mason, and believe me most truly yours. It will not be long before I shall go to London. * " I asked Mr. Gray, what sort of a man Dr. Hurd was ; he answered, ' The last person who left off stiff-topped gloves? '' — Norton Nicholls. Hnrd, in the later editions of his Com- mentary on Horace, suppressed his criticism on the Chinese drama, which he had printed at the end of his Commentary on the Epistle to Augustus, 1751. I am not aware of Hurd, in any passage of his various works, having praised Gray, except once, when he is, I presume, alluded to, in Hurd's usual manner, without mentioning the name, in his Essay on the Marks of Imitation, p. 218, " a certain friend of ours, not to be named without honour, and therefore not at all on so slight an occasion;" which was, that this friend conjectured that Milton's expression of "Grinn'd horrible a ghastly smile," was taken from Spenser's " Grinning griesly." Hurd speaks also of some " late Odes" in terms of praise. In Dr. Wooll's Life of J. Warton there is a letter from Hurd to Mr. Thomas Wartou, in which he thus mentions the Installation Ode: " It is much above the common rate of such things, and will preserve the memory of the Chancellor, when the minister is forgotten." Lett, lxxxix. p. 348. THE POET GRAY. 83 LETTER XIX. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. DEAR, MASON, Cambridge, Saturday, June. I send you inclosed the breast and merry- thought and guts and garbage of the chicken, which I have been chewing so long that I would give the world for neck-beef or cow- heel. I thought, in spite of ennui, that the ten last lines would have escaped untouched ; for all the rest that I send you I know is weakly, and you think so too. But you want them to be printed and done with ; not only Mr. Hurd, but Mr. Bonfoy too and Neville* * Thomas Neville, of Jesus' College, published Imitations of Horace, 1758, and of Juvenal and Persius in 1769. In the Horace, p. 93, Mason is mentioned with praise. Can Mason days of Gothic darkness grace, And not to railings rouse the snarling race ? Mason, who writes not with low sons of rhyme, But on Pindaric pinions soars sublime. Hurd, in his Notes on Horace, vol. i. p. 177, praises Ne- ville's elegant Translation of Aristotle's Moral Song "Apera TroXv/j.o-^de. " Its best commendation (he says) is that it comes from the same hand which has so agreeably entertained us of late with some spirited imitations of Horace." See also Nichols's Literary Anecdotes, vol. ii. p. 306 ; iii. 78; ix. 763; mid Brydges's Restituta, vol. iii. p. 74. Warburton, in his g2 84 LETTERS OF have seen them. Both these like the first Ode (that has no tout-ensemble^) the best of the two, and both somehow dislike the conclusion of the Bard, and mutter something about antithesis and conceit in " to triumph, to die," which I do not comprehend, and am sure it is altered for the better. It was before " Lo! to be free to die, are mine." If you like it better so, so let it be. It is more abrupt, and perhaps may mark the action bet- ter ; or it may be, " Lo! liberty and death are mine." whichever you please. But as to breaking the measure, it is not to be thought of; it is an inviolable law of the Medes and Persians. Pray think a little about this conclusion, for all depends upon it ; the rest is of little conse- quence. " In bearded majesty," was altered to "of" only because the next line begins with " In the midst," &c. I understand what you mean about "The verse adorn again." You may read " Fierce War and faithful Love Resume their," &c Correspondence, mentions him frequently, and with respect. See Letters cxvii. and cxx. Neville also translated the Georgics of Virgil, printed 1767. THE POET GRAY. 85 But I do not think it signifies much, for there is no mistaking the sense, when one attends to it. "That chills the throbbing," &c. I dislike as much at you can do. " Horror wild," I am forced to strike out, because of " wild dismay ' in the first stanza. What if we read " With Horror, tyrant of the throbbing breast." Why you would alter " lost in long futurity " I do not see, unless because you think "lost' and "expire" are tautologies, or because it looks as if the end of the prophecy were disap- pointed by it, and that people may think that poetry in Britain was some time or other really to expire, whereas the meaning is only that it was lost to his ear from the immense distance. I cannot give up " lost," for it begins with an I. I wish you were here, for I am tired of writing such stuff ; and besides, I have got the old Scotch ballad on which Douglas was found- ed ; it is divine, and as long as from hence to Aston.* Have you never seen it ? Aristotle's * On this ballad see Bishop Percy's Reliques of Antient Poetry, vol. iii. p. 69. He considers that the poem lays claim to high antiquity ; it has received considerable modern improve- ments, and the whole has undergone a revisal. The Bishop's old imperfect copy, instead of Lord Barnard has John Stuart, and instead of Gil Morrice Child Maurice, which last, he says, is 86 LETTERS OF best rules are observed in it in a manner that shows the author never had heard of Aristotle. It begins in the fifth act of the play. You may read it two-thirds through without guessing what it is about ; and yet, when you come to the end, it is impossible not to understand the whole storv. I send vou the two first verses : Gil Maurice was an Earle's son, His fame it wexed wide. It was nae for his grete riches, Nae for his mickle pride ; But it was for a ladie gay That lived on Carron's side. " Where shall I get a bonny boy That will win hose and shoon, That will gae to Lord Barnard's ha', And bid his ladie come? Ye maun rin this errand, Willie, And ye maun rin with pride ; WTien other boys gae on their feet, On horseback ye sal ride," " All na, ah na, my master dear," &c. &c. You will observe in the beginning of this thing I send you some alterations of a few words, partly for improvement, and partly to avoid repetitions of like words and rhymes ; I probably the original title. On this ballad the story in Home's tragedy of Douglas is founded. THE POET GRAY. 87 have not got rid of them all. The six last lines of the fifth stanza arc new ; tell me if thev will do. I have seen your friend the Dean of S y here to-day in the theatre, and thought I should have sp-w-d.* I am very glad you are to be a court chaplain nevertheless ; for I do not think you need be such a one, — I defy you ever to be. I have now seen vour first Chorus, new- modelled, and am charmed with it. Now I am coming with my hoe. Of all things I like your idea of " the sober sisters, as they meet and whisper with their ebon and golden rods on the top of Snowdon ;" the more because it seems like a new mythology peculiar to the Druid superstition, and not borrowed of the Greeks, who have another quite different moon. But yet I cannot allow of the word " nod," though it pictures the action more lively than another word would do. Yet, at the first blush, " See the sober sisters nod," taken alone with- out regard to the sense, presents a ridiculous image, and you must leave no room for such ideas ; besides, a word that is not quite fami- * In 1757. See Dodsworth's book on the Cathedral of Salisbury, by which it appears — 1727. John Gierke, D.D. died Feb. 4, 1757, aged 75. I 757. Thomas Green, D.D. succeeded; died L780. S^ LETTERS OF liar to us in the sense it is used should never form a rhyme ; it may stand in any other part of a line. The rest is much to my palate, ex- cept a verse (I have it not now before me) towards the end. I think it is " Float your saffron vestments here," because one does not at once conceive that "float" is "let them float;" and besides, it is a repetition of the idea, as you speak of the " rustling of their silken draperies" before, and I would have every image varied as the rest are. I do not absolutely like "Hist ye all," only because it is the last line. These are all the faults I have to find ; the rest is perfect. I have written a long letter of poetry, which is tiresome, but I could not help it. My service to Mr. Delap. Adieu! Do write soon ; love and compliments. R. For: r ' s * sister Dolly is dead, and he has got 1,400/., a man, and two horses. I go to town next week. If you could write directly, it would be clever ; but, however, direct hither, it will be sent me, if you cannot write so soon. * Richard Forester, a Fellow of Pembroke College, son of Poulter Forester, of Broadfield, Herts ; took senior optime degree in 1747-8, afterwards Rector of Passenham, Northamp- tonshire. He died in April, 1769. THE POET GRAY. 89 LETTER XX. TO THE REV. JAMES BROWN.* DEAR SIR, Stoke, July 25, 1757. I thank you for the second little letter, for your Cambridge Anecdotes, and, suffer me to say too, for the trouble you have had on my account. I am going to add to it, by sending you my poetical cargo to distribute ; though, whatever the advertisement says, it will not be this fortnight yet, for you must know (what you will like no more than I do, yet it was not in my power any how to avoid it), Mr. Wal- pole, who has set up a printing-press in his own house at Twickenham, earnestly desired that he might print it for Dodsiey, and, as there is but one hand employed, you must think it will take up some time to despatch 2000 copies. As soon as may be you will have a parcel sent you, which you will dispose of as follows : Mrs. Bonfoy, Mr. Bonfoy, Dr. Long, Gaskarth, and all the Fellows resident ; Mr. Montagu and Southwell, if they happen to be there; Master of St. John's,f * The Rev. James Brown, of Pembroke Hall, Cambridge, afterwards joint executor with Mason of Gray's will. | John Newcome, Master of St. John's, 1734 to 17G5. See a life of him in Nichols's Anecdotes, vol. i. p. 553-565; and viii. p. 379. 90 LETTERS OF (I know he is at Rochester, but it suffices to send it to his lodge ;) Master of Bennet,* Mr. Hurd, Mr. Balguy, Mr. Talbot, Mr. Nourse, Mr. Neville of Jesus, Mr. Bickham,f Mr. Had- ley, Mr. Newcome. If you think I forget any body, pray send it them in my name ; what remain upon your hands you will hide in a corner. I am sorry to say I know no more of Mason than you do. It is my own fault, I am afraid, for I have not yet answered that letter. His Prussian Majesty wrote a letter to the King owning himself in a bad situation, from which, he said, nothing but a coup-de-maitre would extricate him. % We have a secret expedi- tion § going forward ; all I know is, that Lord * John Green, Master of Ben'et, 1750 to 1764. Dr. Farmer succeeded to his preferments at Lichfield at Green's death in 1790, — a prebend, with the chancellorship annexed; and see anecdote of him in Nichols's Literary Anecdotes, vol. i. p. 662. f He was tutor at Emanuel College. See Nichols's Anec- dotes, vol. viii. p. 420. \ See Lacretelle's Histoire, vol. iii. pp. 307, 319; Belsham's History, vol. iv. book xn. pp. 304 ; Walpole's George II. vol. iii. p. 80, 110, 290 ; see also Wraxall's Memoirs of the Court of Berlin, on the extraordinary Campaign of 1757, vol. i. p. 161, &c. § On this expedition, see Smollett's History of England, vol. iv. chap. vn. p. 61 ; Belsham's History, vol. iv. p. 312 ; T1IE POET GRAY. 91 Ancram, Sir John Mordaunt, and General Con- way are to bear a part in it. The Duke* has been very ill, with his leg ; Ranby was sent for, but countermanded, the Marshal d'Etrees having sent him his own surgeons. I would wish to be like Mr. Bonfoy, and think that every thing turns out the best in the world, but it won't do, I am stupid and low-spirited, but ever yours, T. G. LETTER XXI. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. DEAR MASON, Stoke, Monday, August 1. If I did not send you a political Letter forth- with, it was because Lord Holdernesse came in again f so soon that it was the same thing as if Walpole's George II. vol. iii. chap. m. ; Dodington's Diary, p. 399 ; and note in Gray's Works, vol. iii. p. 179 ; and the Grenville Papers, vol. i. p. 224. * Duke of Cumberland. See an account of the dismissal and resignation of Minis- ters, April 1757, in Walpole's History of George II. vol. iii. p. 27. " The next day Lord Holdernesse went to the , King and resigned the seals, as a declaration of the Newcastle squadron against Fox. The King received him with the cool scorn he deserved." 92 LETTERS OF he had never gone ont, excepting one little cir- cumstance, indeed, the anger of old Priam ; * which, I am told, is the reason, that he has not the blue riband, though promised him before- I have been here this month or more, low-spi- rited and full of disagreeablenesses, and, to add to them, am at this present very ill, not with the gout, nor stone, (thank God,) nor with blotches, nor blains, nor with frogs nor with lice, but with a painful infirmity, that has to me the charms of novelty, but would not amuse you much in the description. I hope you divert yourself much better than I do. You may be sure Dodsley had orders to send you some Odes the instant they were off the spit ; indeed I forgot Mr. Praser, so I fear they mil come to Sheffield in the shape of a small parcel by some coach or waggon ; but if there is time I will prevent it. They had been out three weeks ago, but Mr. Walpole having taken it into his head to set up a press of his own at Twickenham, was so earnest to handsel it with this new pamphlet that it was impos- sible to find a pretence for refusing such a trifle. You will dislike this as much as I do, but there is no help ; you understand, it is he that prints them, not for me, but for Dodsley. * George the Second, THE POET GRAY. 93 I charge you send me some Caractacus be- fore I die ; it is impossible this weather should not bring him to maturity. If you knew how bad I was you would not wonder I could write no more. Adieu, dear Mason ; I am ever most truly yours, T. G. LETTER XXII. TO THE REV. JAMES BROWN. DEAR SlR, August 14, 1757. Excuse me if I begin to wonder a little that I have heard no news of you in so long a time. I conclude you received Dodsley's packet at least a week ago, and made my presents. You will not wonder therefore at my curiosity, if I inquire of you what you hear said ; for, though in the rest of the world I do not expect to hear that any body says much, or thinks about the matter, yet among mes confreres, the learned, I know there is always leisure, at least to find fault, if not to commend. I have been lately much out of order, and confined at home, but now I go abroad again. 94 LETTERS OF Mr. Garrick and his wife* have passed some days at my Lady Cobham's,t and are shortly to return again ; they, and a few other people that I see there, have been my only entertainment till this week, but now I have purchased some volumes of the great French Encyclopedic, and am trying to amuse myself within doors. Pray tell me a great deal, and believe me ever most faithfully yours, T. G. LETTER XXIII. TO MR. HURD. DEAR SlR, Stoke, August 25, 1757. I do not know why you should thank me for what you had a right and title to ; but attribute it to the excess of your politeness, and the more so because almost no one else has made me the same compliment. As your acquaintance in the University (you say) do me the honour to ad- mire, it would be ungenerous in me not to give * Compare this Letter with one to Dr. Wharton (17 Aug.) on the same topics, and nearly in the same language, Works, vol. iii. p. 165. f At Stoke. THE POET GRAY. 95 them notice that they arc doing a very un- fashionable thing, for all people of condition are agreed not to admire, nor even to understand : one very great man, writing to an acquaintance of his and mine, says that he had read them seven or eight times, and that now, when he next sees him, he shall not have above thirty questions to ask.* Another, a peer, believes that the last stanza of the Second Ode relates to King Charles the First and Oliver Cromwell. Even my friends tell me they do not succeed, and write me moving topics of consolation on that head ; in short, I have heard of nobody but a player and a doctor of divinity t that profess their esteem for them. Oh yes ! a lady of quality, a friend of Mason's, who is a great reader. She knew there was a compliment to Dry den, but never suspected there was any thing said about Shakspeare or Milton, till it was explained to her ; and wishes that there had been titles prefixed to tell what they were about. * SeeWalpole's Miscellaneous Letters, vol. iii. pp. 309,313. Letter to H. Mann on these Odes, vol. iii. p. 234. f Garrick and Dr. Warburton. Garrick wrote some verses in their praise. See Walpole's Miscellaneous Correspondence, vol. v. p. 2G1. On Warburton's opinion see Gray's Letters (Works, vol. iii. pp. 167 and 178.) 9G LETTERS OF From this mention of Mason's name you may think, perhaps, we are great correspondents ; no such thing ; I have not heard from him these two months. I will be sure to scold in my own name as well as in yours. I rejoice to hear you are so ripe for the press, and so voluminous,* — not for my own sake only, whom you natter with the hopes of seeing your labours both public and private, — but for yours too, for to be em- ployed is to be happy. This principle of mine, and I am convinced of its truth, has, as usual, no influence on my practice. I am alone and ennuye to the last degree, yet do nothing ; indeed Ihave one excuse; my health, which you so kindly inquire after, is not extraordinary, ever since I came hither. It is no great malady, but several little ones, that seem brewing no good to me. It will be a particular pleasure to me to hear whether Content dwells in Leicestershire, t and how she entertains herself there; onlv do not be * Alluding probably to the " Moral and Political Dialogues " then composing, and published in 1759. | Mr. Hurd was settled in Leicestershire February 16, 1757, on a College living. See Mason's Elegy IV. to Mr. Hurd. Whose equal mind could see vain Fortune shower Her flowery favours on the fawning creAv, While in low Thurcastori's sequestered bower She fixed him distant from Promotion's view. THE POET GRAY. 97 too happy, nor forget entirely the quiet ugliness of Cambridge. I am, dear sir, Your friend and obliged humble servant, T. Gray. If Mr. Brown falls in your way, be so good to shew him the beginning of this letter, and it will save me the labour of writing the same thing twice. His first letter, I believe, was in the mail that was robbed, for it was delaved many days ; his second I have just received. LETTER XXIV. to the rev. william mason. Dear Mason, You are welcome to the land of the living, to the sunshine of a court, to the dirt of a chap- lain's table,* to the society of Dr. Squire f and * Mason was appointed, by the Duke of Devonshire, chaplain in ordinary to George II. 1757. f " And leave Church and State to Charles Townshend and Squire," is a line which concludes Gray's sketch of his own character. See an account of Dr. Squire, in Gray's Works, ed. Aid. vol. i. p. 156. He was Fellow of St. John's, Rector of St. Anne's, Soho, afterwards Dean of Bristol, and then Bishop of St. H 98 LETTERS OF Dr. Chapman. Have you set out, as Dr. Cob- den ended, with a sermon against adultery ? or do you, with deep mortification and a Christian sense of your own nothingness, read prayers to Princess Emily* while she is putting on her David's ; died 7 May, 1766. See Bishop Newton's Life of Himself, p. 78. The well-knoAvn saying of Warburton may serve to explain Gray's line, quoted above. He told Mr. Allen that never bishoprick was so bedeaned, for one (Squire) made religion his trade, and the other (Tucker) trade his religion. Mr. Cradock, in his Memoirs, has not told the story quite correctly; see vol. iv. 335. See on Dr. Squire Harris's Phi- losophical Arrangements, p. 247 ; Noble's Continuation of Granger, vol. ii. p. 313 ; Nichols's Literary Illustrations, vol. v. p. 766 ; Nichols's Literary Anecdotes, vol. i. p. 625; ii. p. 348. He was made Bishop of St. David's 1761. Gray writes to Dr. Wharton, " I wish you joy of Dr. Squire's bishop- rick; he keeps back his livings, and is the happiest of devils." Dr. Dodd was his Chaplain, and Dr. Squire introduced him in the warmest terms to the patronage of Lord Chesterfield ; in a sermon dedicated to Mrs. Squire, 1767, Dr. Dodd has given a summary of the Bishop's Life and Works. It is extracted in Monthly Eeview, xxxvi. p. 252. See also Dr. King's Anecdotes, p. 154, for a violent attack on Squire, on his mean birth, &c. &c. On Dr. Chapman, see the note in Lett. in. * Compare the anecdote in Walpole's Reminiscences. " While the Queen (Caroline J dressed, prayers used to be read in the outer room, where hung a naked Venus. Mrs. Srhvyn, bed-chamber woman in waiting, was ordered one day to bid the chaplain, Dr. Maddox, afterwards Bishop of Worcester, begin the service. He said archly, " and a THE POET GRAY. ( .M) dress? Pray acquaint me with the whole ceremo- nial, and how your first preachment succeeded ; whether you have heard of any hody that re- nounced their election, or made restitution to the Exchequer; whether you saw any woman trample her pompons under foot, or spit upon her handkerchief to wipe off the rouge. I would not have put another note to save the souls of all the owls in London. It is ex- tremely well as it is — nobody understands me,' and I am perfectly satisfied. Even the Critical Review* (Mr. Franklin, I am told), that is rapt and surprised and shudders at me, yet mistakes the iEolian lyre for the harp of iEolus, which, indeed, as he observes, is a very bad instrument to dance to. If you hear anything (though it is not very likely, for I know my day is over), you will tell me. Lord Lyttelton and Mr. Shenstone t admire me, but wish I had been a very proper altar-piece, Madam." Queen Anne had the same custom, and once ordering the door to be shut while she shifted, the Chaplain stopped. The Queen sent to ask why he did not proceed. He replied, " He would not whistle the word of God through the keyhole." * See Critical Review, vol. iv. p. 1G7. " Such an instrument as the JEolian harp, which is altogether uncertain and irre- gular, must be very ill adapted to the dance, which is one continued, regular movement," &c. t " Mr. Gray, of manners very delicate, yet possessed of a H 2 100 LETTERS OF little clearer. Mr. (Palmyra) Wood* owns him- self disappointed in his expectations. Your enemy, Dr. Brown, f says I am the best thing in the language. Mr. Eox, supposing the Bard sung his song but once over, does not wonder if Edward the First did not understand him. This last criticism is rather unhappy, for though it had been sung a hundred times under his window, it was absolutely impossible King Ed- ward should understand him ; but that is no reason for Mr. Eox, who lives almost 500 years after him. It is very well ; the next thing I print shall be in Welch, — that's all. I delight in your Epigram, but dare not show it anybody, for your sake; but I more delight to hear from Mr. Hurd that Caractacus advances. Am I not to see Mador's song ? Could not we meet some day, — at Hounslow, for example, after your waiting is over ? Do tell me time and place. I am most truly yours, T. G. poetical vein fraught with the noblest and sublimest images, and a mind fraught with the more masculine parts of learning. 1 " — See Shenstone's Essays, vol. ii. 248. * A portrait of Mr. Palmyra Wood, by Mengs, is in the Bridge water Gallery, No. 121. He accompanied the Duke of Bridgewater in his travels through Italy. f The author of the Estimate. THE POET Git AY. 101 If you write to Lord Jersey, commend me to him. I was so civil to send a, book to Lord Nuncham, but hear nothing of him. Where is Stonhewer ? I am grown a stranger to him. You will oblige me by sending to Dodsley's, to say I wonder the third and fourth volumes of the Encyclopedic are not come. If you chance to call yourself, you might inquire if many of my 2,000 remain upon his hands. He told me a fortnight ago about 12 or 1,300 were gone. You talk of writing a comment. I do not desire you should be employed in any such office ; but what if Delap (inspired by a little of your intelligence) should do such a matter ? it will get him a shilling ; but it must bear no name, nor must he know I mentioned it. LETTER XXV. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. Dear Mason, Stoke, Sept. 28, 1757. I have, as I desired Stonhewer to tell you, read over Caractacus twice, not with pleasure only, but with emotion.* You may say what * On the drama which excited emotion in Gray, Walpole writer, •• Mr. Mason has published another drama called 102 LETTERS OF you will, but the contrivance, the manners, the interests, the passions, and the expression, go beyond the dramatic part of your Elfrida many, many leagues. I even say (though you will think me a bad judge of this) that the world will like it better. I am struck with the Chorus, who are not there merely to sing and dance, but bear throughout a principal part in the action, and have (beside the costume, which is excellent) as much a character of their own as any other person. I am charmed with their priestly pride and obstinacy, when, after all is lost, they resolve to confront the Roman Gene- ral, and spit in his face. But now I am going to tell you what touches me most. From the beginning the first opening is greatly improved. The curiosity of Didius is now a very natural reason for dwelling on each particular of the scene before him, nor is the description at all too long. I am glad to find the two young men are Cartismandua's sons; they interest me far more. I love people of condition. They were men before that nobody knew ; one could Caractacus. There are some incantations poetical enough, and odes so Greek as to have very little meaning. But the whole is laboured, uninteresting, and no more resembling the man- ners of Britons than of the Japanese," &c. — Misc. Lett. iii. p. 455. TILE POET GRAY. 103 not make them a bow if one had met them at a publie place. I always admired that interruption of the Druids to Evelina, "Peace, Virgin, peace," &c. and chiefly the abstract idea personified (to use the words of a critic) at the end of it. That of " Caractacus would save my Queen," &c, and still more, that, " I know it, reverend Fathers, 'tis heaven's high will," &c. to " I've done, begin the rites !" This latter is exemplary for the expression (always the great point with me) ; I do not mean by expression the mere choice of words, but the whole dress, fashion, and arrangement of a thought. Here, in parti- cular, it is the brokenness, the ungranimatical position, the total subversion of the period, that charms me. All that ushers in the incantation, from " Try we yet what holiness can do," I am delighted with in quite another way, for this is pure poetry, as it ought to be, forming the proper transition, and leading on the mind to that still purer poetry that follows it. You have somehow mistaken my meaning about the sober Sisters : the verb " nod," before " only," seemed to be a verb neuter; now you have made it absolutely such, which was just my objection to it; but it is easily altered, for if the accusative case come first, there is no danger of ambiguity. I read 10A LETTERS OF See ! their gold and ebon rod Where the sober Sisters nod, And greet in whispers sage and slow. Snowdon, mark ! 'tis Magic's hour; Now the mutter'd spell hath power, Power to rift* thy ribs of rock, To burst thy base with thunder's shock, But, &c. &c. Than those that dwell In musick's, &c. You will laugh at my " these' s" and ' ' those' s," but they strike my ear better. "What Mador sings must be the finest thing that ever was wrote ; and the next chorus, where they all go to sleep, must be finer still. In the beginning of the succeeding act I admire the chorus again, t "Is it not now the hour, the holy hour," &c. : and their evasion of a lie, " Say'st thou, proud boy," &c. : and " Sleep with the unsunn'd silver," which is an example of a dramatic simile. The sudden ap- pearance of Caractacus, the pretended respect and admiration of Vellinus, and the probability * " rend" in the printed copies. f Bishop Hurd, in his remarks on the ancient Chorus, says, " It may be sufficient to refer the English reader to the late tragedies of Elfrida and Caractacus; which do honour to modern poetry, and are a better apology than any I could make for the ancient chorus." — See Hurd's Commentary on Horace, \ ol. i. p. 132. THE POET GRAY. 105 of his story, the distrust of the Druids, and their reasoning with Caractacus, and particu- larly that, " Tis meet thou should' st ; thou art a king," &c. &c. ; " Mark me, Prince, the time wall come when destiny," &c, are well and happily imagined. Apropos of the last striking passage I have mentioned, I am going to make a digression. When we treat a subject where the manners are almost lost in antiquity our stock of ideas must needs be small, and nothing betrays our poverty more than the returning to and harping frequently on one image ; it was therefore I thought vou should omit some lines before, though good in themselves, about the scythed car, that the passage now before us might appear with greater lustre when it came ; and in this, I see, you have complied with me. But there are other ideas here and there still that occur too often, particularly about the oaks, some of which I would discard to make way for the rest. But the subjects I speak of, to compensate (and more than compensate) that unavoidable poverty, have one great advantage when they fall into good hands : thev leave an unbounded liberty to pure imagination and fiction (our favourite provinces), where no critic can molest or antiquary gainsay us. And yet (to please 106 LETTERS OF me) these fictions must have some affinity, some seeming connection with that little we really know of the character and customs of the people. Por example, I never heard in my days that midnight and the moon were sisters, that they carried rods of ebony and gold, or met to whisper on the top of a moun- tain; hut now, I could lay my life it is all true, and do not doubt it will be found so in some Pantheon of the Druids that is to be dis- covered in the library at Herculaneum. The Car of Destiny and Death is a very noble in- vention of the same class, and, as far as that goes, is so fine, that it makes me more delicate than, perhaps, I should be. About the close of it, Andraste, sailing on the wings of Fame, that snatches the wreaths from oblivion to hang them on her loftiest amaranth, though a clean and beautiful piece of unknown mythology, has too Greek an air too give me perfect satisfaction. Noav I proceed. The preparation to the Chorus, though ' so much akin to that in the former act, is excellent. The remarks of Eve- lina, and her suspicions of the brothers, mixed with a secret inclination to the younger of them (though, I think, her part throughout wants re-touching), yet please me much ; and the con- trivance of the following scene much more. THE POET GRAY. 107 " Masters of wisdom, no," &c. I always ad- mired, as I do the rocking-stone and the distress of Elidurus. Evelina's examination of him is a well-invented scene, and will be, with a little pains, a very touching one ; hut the introduc- tion of Arviragus is superlative. I am not sure whether those few lines of his short nara- tive, " My strength repaired, it boots not that I tell," &c. do not please me as much as any- thing in the whole drama. The sullen bravery of Elidurus ; the menaces of the Chorus, that "Think not, Religion," &c; the trumpet of the Druids ; that " I'll follow him, though in my chains," &c. ; "Hast thou a brother, no," &c. ; the placability of the "Chorus when they see the motives of Elidurus' obstinacy, give me great contentment. So do the reflections of the Druid on the necessity of lustration, and the reasons for Vellinus' easy escape ; but I would not have him seize on a spear, nor issue hastily through the cavern's mouth. Why should he not steal away unmarked and unmissed till the hurry of passions in those that should have guarded him was a little abated ? But I chiefly admire the two speeches of Elidurus : — " Ah ! Vellinus, is this thee," &c, and " Ye do gaze on me, Fathers," &c. The manner in which the Chorus reply to him is very fine, but the 108 LETTERS OF image at the end wants a little mending. The next scene is highly moving ; it is so very good that I must have it made yet hetter. Now for the last Act. I do not know what you would have, but to me the design and contrivance of it is at least equal to any part of the whole. The short-lived triumph of the Britons— the address of Caractacus to the Roman victims — Evelina's discovery of the ambush — the mistake of the Roman fires for the rising sun — the death of Arviragus — the interview between Didius and Caractacus — his mourning over his dead son — his parting speech (in which you have made all the use of Tacitus that your plan would admit) — everything, in short, but that little dispute between Didius and him, " 'Tis well, and therefore to increase that reverence," &c, down to " Give me a mo- ment," (which must be omitted, or put in the mouth of the Druid,) I approve in the highest degree. If I should find any fault with the last Act it could only be with trifles and little expressions. If you make any alterations I fear it will never improve it, I mean as to the plan. I send you back the two last sheets, because you bid me. I reserve my nibblings and minutiae for another day. Adieu. I am most truly yours, T. G. HIE POET GRAY. 109 I have had a printed Ode sent me, called " Melpomene."* Pray who wrote it ? I suspect Mr. Bedingfield,! Montagu,:}: young Pitt,§ or Delap. Do say I like it. * See Dodsley's Poems in Anderson's Collection, vol. xi. p. 76 ; Critical Review, vol. iv. p. 465. f See Gray's Letter to Dr. Wharton, October 7, 1757. M Mr. Bedingfield, in a golden shower of panegyric, writes me word, ' That at York races he overheard three people, whom by their dress and manner he takes for Lords,' say, " That / vms impenetrable and inexplicable." — Works, vol. iii. p. 178. In Dodsley's Collection of Poems, vol. iii. p. 119, is a poem, " The Death of Achilles," by Mr. Bedingfield. See on him a letter of Dr. J. Warton to his brother, 1753, " Give my compliments to Bedingfield. I am glad he is emerging into life from Hertford College," in Dr. Wooll's Life of Dr. Warton, p. 217; and one from Dodsley, " Mr. Bedingfield has actually refined his taste to a degree that makes him dissatisfied with almost every composition," p. 225 ; and another from him of the year 1757 to Dr. Warton, p. 244, on Milton. | Frederick Montagu, son of Charles Montagu, of Paple- wick, in Northamptonshire. He is mentioned again by Gray in Letters, Jan. 1761, vol. iii. p. 262 ; and by Walpole, in Memoirs of George III. vol. i. p. 396; " young Thomas Pitt and Frederick Montagu, Sandwich's own cousin ;" and see Selwyn Correspondence, vol. ii. p. 266, " Fred Montagu sits for Higham Ferrers." § Mr. Thomas Pitt, of Boconnock, nephew of Lord Chat- ham, afterwards Lord Camelford, died at Florence in 1793. See on him Gray's Letter to Dr. Wharton, Jan. 1760. " Mr. Pitt, not the great but the little one, is set out on his travels;" and, Jan. 1761, " Young Pitt, whom I believe you have heard 110 LETTERS OF LETTER XXVI. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. Dear Mason, Friday, Oct. 13, 1757. I thank you for your history of Melpomene, which is curious and ought to be remembered ; the judgment of knowing ones ought always to be upon record, that they may not be suffered to retract and mitigate their applause. If I were Dodsley I Avould sue them, and they rne mention, is returned to England," &c. His only son and successor was killed in a duel in 1804, and his daughter was married to Lord Grenville in 1792. He is most favourably mentioned by Walpole in a letter to Mason. " He is not only an ingenious young man, but a most amiable one. He has always acted in the most noble style," &c. And in the Preface to the Letters of Lord Chatham, which were written to him, Lord Grenville says, " The same suavity of manners and steadiness of principle, the same trueness of judgment and integrity of heart, which characterised him in the first dawn of youth, distinguished him through life ; and the same affectionate attachment of the people who knew him best, has followed him beyond the grave." See also Walpole's Misc. Letters, ii. 271, iv. pp. 25, 268, 299; Letters to Mason, vol. i. pp. 30, 104; Memoirs of George III. vol. i. pp. 259, 339; Grenville Papers, ii. p. 320. He was attached to George Grenville, and by him made a Lord of the Admiralty. Lord Camelford's Letters (fifty-eight in number) to G. Hardinge are printed in the sixth volume of Nichols's Literary Illustrations, pp. 83—106. THE POET GRAY. Ill should buckle my shoe in Westminster Hall. What is the reason I hear nothing of your waiting, and your performances in public? Ano- other thing, — why has Mr. Kurd's Letter* to you never been advertised ? and why do not I hear what any body says about it ? I go from hence for three days on Wednes- day next, and hope your installation will not be so over that you should come to Windsor be- fore I return ; if I had notice in due time, I would meet you at the Christopher in Eton, or, if you choose it, — you know the worst, having been already here, — shall rejoice to see you at Stoke. In town I shall hardly be till next month. Our expedition is extremely a VAnglaise, * In 1757 Hurd published a Letter to Mason, "on the marks of Imitation," which is since incorporated as a dis- sertation in his Horace. See this Letter mentioned by Gray to Dr. Wharton in "Works, Letter lxxiv. vol. iii. p. 177. The remarks that appeared against it, anonymously written with much acrimony (v. Monthly Review, 1766, i. 474), were by Mr. Capell. Hurd maintained through life his friendship for Mason, which was formed at college; and at Mason's death, in 1797, a long and interesting correspondence was returned by his executors to the Bishop. In Hurd's paper called " Some Occurrences in my Life," is the following entry: " Mr. Mason died at Aston, April 5, 1797. He was one of my oldest and most respected friends. Very few of this description now re- main." Doctor Whitaker truly said, " Bishop Ilurdwas the last survivor of Gray's friends ;" except Mr. Nicholls of Blundeston. 112 LETTERS OF but I have given up all thoughts of England, and care for nobody but the King of Prussia. Pray do not suffer your megrims to prevail over you ; it is good for you that you should come to school for a few months now and then. I must say no one has profited more in so few lessons. Common sense no where thrives better than in the neighbourhood of nonsense. Take care of your health, and believe me ever yours, T. G. Send me Elegy,* — my hoe is sharp. LETTER XXVII. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. Dear Mason, Dec. 19, 1757. Though I very well know the bland emollient saponaceous qualities both of sack and silver, yet if any great man would say to me, " I make you Hat-catcher to his Majesty, with a salary of £300 a-vear and two butts of the best Malaga ; and though it has been usual to catch a mouse * Mason's " Elegy in the Garden of a Friend." See Gray's Works, vol. iii. p. 185, ed. Aid.; and Mason's Works, vol. i. p. 100. THE POET GRAY. 113 or two, for form's sake, in public once a year, yet to you, sir, we shall not stand upon these things," I cannot say I should jump at it ; nay, if they would drop the very name of the office, and call me Sinecure to the King's Majesty, I should still feel a little awkward, and think every body I saw smelt a rat about me ; but I do not pretend to blame any one else that has not the same sensations ; for my part I would rather be Serjeant trumpeter or pinmaker to the palace. Nevertheless I interest myself a little in the history of it, and rather wish somebody may accept it that will retrieve the credit of the thins?, if it be retrievable, or ever had any credit. Howe was, I think, the last man of character that had it. As to Settle, whom you mention, he belonged to my lord mayor not to the king.* Ensdent was a person of great hopes * [This paragraph on " Settle " is omitted in Mason's edi- lioii; hut the whole letter, though of the same date, 19th Dec. 17">7, i« composed of the present and the following, with numerous additions, omissions, and alterations.] Elkanah Settle, born 1646, died 1724; the last of the city poets; for, when the Lord Mayors' pageants dropped, the office fell with them. He commenced his poetical life by opposing Dryden; and he ended it by writing drolls for Bartholomew Fair. His friend, John Dunton, lias praised him in his Life, p. 243; ami be still lives embalmed and immortal in the Diuieiad of Pope, b. i. ver. 90. f Appointed poet laureate by Lord Halifax, in L716. He I 114 LETTERS OF in his youth, though at last he turned out a drunken parson. Dryden* was as disgraceful to the office, from his character, as the poorest scribbler could have been from his verses. The office itself has always humbled the pro- fessor hitherto (even in an age when kings were somebody), if he were a poor writer by making him more conspicuous, and if he were a good one by setting him at war with the little fry of his own profession, for there are poets little enough to envy even a poet laureat. I am obliged to you for your news; pray send me some more, and better of the sort. I can tell you nothing in return ; so your generosity will was rector of Coningsby in Lincolnshire, (which afterwards received another poet, the author of the Fleece), where he died in 1730. He too appears in company with his brother Settle, engaged in no very noble occupation. Cl And Eusde/i eke out Blackmore's endless line." See Dunciad, i. ver. 103, and the note. * " Ill-fated Dryden! who unmov'd can see The extremes of wit and meanness meet in thee?" Brown's Essay on Satire. " If Pope thro' friendship fail'd — indignant view, Yet pity Dryden! hark! whene'er he sings, How Adulation drops his courtly dew <)n titled rhymers and inglorious kings." — Mason. See Dryden's character finely and forcibly drawn by Pro- , Smyth, in Lectures on Modern History, vol. ii. p. 41. THE POET GRAY. 115 be the greater ; — only Dick* is going to give up his rooms, and live at Ash well. Mr. Treasurer t sets Sir M. Lamb! at nought, and says he has sent him reasons half a sheet at a time ; and Mr. Brown attests his veracity as an eye-wit- ness. I have had nine pages of criticism on the Bard sent me in an anonymous letter, § di- rected to the Reverend Mr. G-. at Strawberry Hill ; and if I have a mind to hear as much more on the other Ode, I am told where I may direct. He seems a good sensible man, and I dare say a clergyman. He is very frank, and indeed much ruder than he means to be. Adieu, dear Mason, and believe me that I am too. * Dick is the Rev. Richard Forester, mentioned before, in Letter xix., son of Poulter Forester, Esq. of Broadfield, Herts. He vacated his fellowship at the end of the year 1757, and went to Ash well in his own county. f Mr. Joseph Gaskarth was the college treasurer, but the subject of his disagreement with Sir M. Lamb does not appear ' 1 1 be known. J Probably Sir Matthew Lamb, of Brocket Hall, Herts, created a Baronet in 1755 ; father of the first Lord Melbourne, lie died G Nov. 17G8. See Clutterbuck's Hertfordshire, ii, p. 361. § See Gray's Letter to Dr. Wharton, Dec. 8, 1757. The writer was a Mr. J. Butler, of Andover. See p. 113, •• » n « 1 note ofthe Editor of Gray's Works, vol. iii. p. 181. I 2 116 LETTERS OE LETTER XXVIII. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. Dear Mason, Jan. 3, 1758. A life spent out of the world has its hours of despondence, its inconveniences, its sufferings, as numerous and as real (though not quite of the same sort) as a life spent in the midst of it. The power we have, when we will exert it, over our own minds, joined to a little strength and consolation, nay, a little pride we catch from those that seem to love us, is our only support in either of these conditions. I am sensible I cannot return to you so much of this assistance as I have received from you. I can only tell you that one who has far more reason than you (I hope) will ever have to look on life with something worse than indifference, is yet no enemy to it, and can look backward on many bitter moments partly with satisfaction, and partly with patience, and forward too, on a scene not very promising, with some hope and some expectations of a better day. The con- versation you mention seems to me to have been in some measure the cause of your reflec- tion. As you do not describe the manner (which is very essential, and yet cannot easily THE POET GRAY. 117 be described,) to be sure I can judge but very imperfectly of it. But if (as you say) it ended very amicably, why not take it as amicably ? In most cases I am a great friend to eclair - cissements ; it is no pleasant task to enter upon them, therefore it is always some merit in the person who does so. I am in the dark too as to what you have said of . To whom, where, before whom, how did it come round? for you certainly would not do it indiscrimi- nately, nor without a little reserve. I do not mean on your own account (for he is an object of contempt, that would naturally tempt any one to laugh, or ■ himself J, but for the person's sake with whom you so often are, who (merely from his situation) must neither laugh nor himself, as you and I might do. Who knows ? any little imprudence (which it is so pleasant to indulge) might really be disagree- able in its consequences to him ; for it would be said infallibly, though very unjustly, that you would not dare to take these liberties with- out private encouragement, at least, that he had no aversion to hear in secret what you ventured to say in public. You do not ima- gine that the world (which always concludes wrong about the motives of such minds as it has not been used to) will think you have any 118 LETTERS OF sentiments of your own ; and though you (if you thought it worth while) might wish to convince them of their mistake, yet you would not do it at the expense of another, especially of this other ; in short, I think (as far as I know) you have no reason from this to take any such resolution as you meditate. Make use of it in its season, as a relief from what is tiresome to you, but not as if it was in conse- quence of something you take ill ; on the con- trary, if such a conference had happened about the time of your transmigration, I would defer it, to avoid that appearance merely : for the frankness of this proceeding has to me an ap- pearance of friendliness that one would by no means wish to suppress. I am ashamed not to have returned Mr. Ilurd my thanks for his book ; * pray do it for me in the civilest manner, and tell him I shall be here till April, when I must go for a short time to town, but shall return again hither. I rejoice to hear he is again coming out, and had no notion of his being so ready for the press. I wrote to the man (as you bid me), and had It appears by the dates of his life that Hurd printed in 1757 his " Remarks on Hume's Natural History of Religion;" or the book which he gave to Gray might be the new edition of his Commentary on Horace. THE POET GRAY. 119 a second criticism ; his name (for I desired to know it) is Bntlcr. He is (he says) of the num- ber of those who live less contented than they ought, in an independent indolence, can just afford himself a horse for airings about Hare- wood Forest (the scene of Elfrida), half a score new books in a season, and good part of half an acre of garden-ground for honeysuckles and roses. Did you know that Hare wood was near Andover ? * I think that you had some friend in that neighbourhood, — is it not Mr. Bourne ? however, do not inquire, for our correspondence is to be a profound secret. Adieu ! I am ever truly yours, T. G. LETTER XXIX. THE REV. WILLIAM MASON TO GRAY. Dear Mr. Gray, Syon Hill, Jan. 5, 1758. I send you with your anonymous Criticisms the produce of Christmas. But first, as to the * Hare-wood is in Herefordshire, union of Ross, upper divi- sion of the hundred of "VVormelow. This parish formerly belonged to the forest of Harewood, in which Earl Ethel wold is supposed to have been assassinated by King Edgar for his misconduct to the fair Elfrida. — Parliamentary Gazetteer. 120 LETTERS OF Criticisms. I think just as you do about tliem; yet I have so much good -nature even for a critic, that I think I would write to him ; though on second thoughts it scarce signifies, when one reflects what he has said about the famished eagle. Now be it known unto you, I send you two Odes, one so very ancient that all the ^Eolian lyres that ever sounded are mere things of yes- terday in comparison. If you have a mind to trace my imagery, you will find it all huddled to- gether by Keysler, in his " Antiquitates Select ic Septentrionales et Celticse."* The book I do not doubt is to be met with at Cambridge ; and if you have not seen it you need only read his second chapter. But tell me, may this sort of imagery be employed ? will its being Celtic make it Druidical ? If it will not, burn it ; if it will, why scratch it ad libitum, and send it me back as soon as possible. The other Ode is as modern as can be wished, and is that upon which I trust all my future fame will be founded. While Lord Bolingbroke stands upon the same shelf with Malebranche and Locke, I have no fear but I shall squeeze myself between Soame Jenyns and Lord Ches- * Published at Hanover in 1728. See Saxii One-mast. Lite rariuMjVol. vi. p. 287; Acta Lipsiensia, 1721, April, p. 102. THE POET Gil AY. 1 1_M terfield, and I swear I will not give the paa to Sir Charles Hanbury. " Well, but who is this Mr. Jolliffe; and how came you acquainted with him?" Lord! you are not one of us ; you know nothing- of life. AVhy, Mr. Jolliffe is a bookseller's son in St. James's Street, who takes profiles with a candle better than any body. All White's have sat to him, not to mention Prince Edward. At first his price was only half a crown, but it is now raised to a crown, and he has literally got above a hun- dred pounds by it. Return it with the other Ode, and be sure let nobody see it, except Mr. JiroAvn. I cannot finish my letter without telling you an excellent story of Fobus.* On the death of * The name by which Gray and his friends used to d'.-ignate the Duke of Newcastle, though occasionally be stowed on another Lord, as " Lord Radnor, a simple old Fobus." See Works, vol. iii. p. 157. " His vanity," says Professor Smyth, " and some defects of character, exposed him to the ridicule of wits and satirists." See a more impar- tial character of him in the Rockingham Memoirs, vol. i. pp. 11-13. Mason, then Fellow of Pembroke Hall, wrote the Ode. ui the Installation of the Duke of Newcastle at Cam- bridge. It is printed in Dodsley's Collection of Poems, vol. iv. p. 269. Gray says, that " Mason's < )de was the only enter- tainment that had anj tolerable elegance; and for my own part, 1 think it (with some little abatements) uncommonly 122 LETTERS OF the laurcat, Lord Barrington* told him he was very glad to find that I was not to succeed, he- cause it would he a shame to employ me in writing such stuff as birth-day odes. Fobus said he did not know me. Lord B. stared, and told him he wondered at that, " for that he of all people ought to know me." Still Fobus was ignorant ; in short, Lord B. was obliged to rattle the Installation Ode in his ears before Fobus would own to the least bit of remem- brance. t Pray tell this story to every body, it is mat- ter of fact, and I think to both our credits. Adieu ! I would give all I am worth, that is well on such an occasion," &c. The Ode is not to be found in Mason's collected Works, four vols. 8vo. which were pub- lished by his relation Mr. Dixon, though without a name. The Monthly Review says, " The Isis, an Elegy, and the Ode were probably suppressed from prudential or political con- siderations." See Monthly RevieAv, 1764, vol. i. p. GO. On this Installation compare Walpole's Letter to Mason, Misc. Lett. vol. ii. p. 286. * William Lord Viscount Barrington, who filled many public offices, and retired from Parliament in 1778; died Feb. 1, 1793. See account of him in Rockingham Memoirs, vol. ii. p. 190: his Life has been written by his brother, the Bishop of Durham. His official career extended over a period of twenty-four years. He had been successively Secretary-at- War, Chancellor of the Exchequer, and Treasurer of the Navy. THE POET GRAY. 123 to say, Caractacus and my Ode to Mr. Jolliffc, to sec an Ode to the King of Prussia by your hand, lie has certainly taken Breslau, and in it 11 general officers and 10,000 prisoners.* Yours sincerely. To Mr. Jolliffc (who cuts out likenesses from the shadow at White's): — Oh thou that on the walls of White's, The temple of virtu, Of dukes and earls, and lords and knights, Portray'st the features true ! Hail, founder of the British school ! No aids from science gleaning; Let Reynolds blush, ideal fool, \\ ho gives his pictures meaning ; Of taste or manners let him dream, With all his art and care, lie can but show us what men seem You show us what they are. Let connoisseurs of colouring talk, What is't at best but skin; You, Jolliffe, at one master-stroke, Display the void within. Come, Bob,f and ope the club-room dooi And let the Muses follow ; By God, they'll lay you six to four, They guess each face all hollow. See B( I sham's Hist. vol. iv. p. 29; Smollett's Hist. vol. iv. p 188. t See Walpole and Mason's < orrespondena . vol. i. p. 12 J LETTERS OF " Well, who is this ?" " This sail'd with Bj ng, Minorca's siege to raise; This for surrendering gain'd a string ; This eat the grapes of Aix ; These did to Nova Scotia go, Cape Breton's forts to sack, And (spite of French and Indian foe), Safe brought their shadows back." Oh, JoUifle! may the historic sage Thy art and judgment steal, And when he draws the present age, Still sketch it in profile. ( >r since an honest hand Avould hate Fictitious lights to spread, Let him revere Britannia's fate, And throw it all in shade. 131. " Bob, formerly a waiter at White's, was set up by 1 1 1 y nephew for two boroughs, and actually was returned for I Jastle Rising with Mr. Wedderburne. Servus curru portatur eodem.'' Walpole's Letters; and vol. ii. p. 132. " When Macreath serv'd in Arthur's crew , He said to liurnbold, ' Black my sho<;' To which he answered ' Aye, Bol> : But when returned from India's land, And grown too proud to brook command, He sternly answered, ' .Nay, Bob.' " Sir Roberl Macreath had been head waiter at the Cocoa, where be was known as " Bob." See Clubs in London, vol. i. p. 145. In a Letter to Horace Mann, Walpole says, "Lord Orford had borrowed money of him; brought him into Parliament for THE POET GRAY. L25 LETTER XXX TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. Dear Mason, Jan. 13, 1758. Why you make no more of writing an Ode, and throwing it into the fire, than of buckling and unbuckling your shoe. I have never read Keysler's book, nor you neither, I believe ; if you had taken that pains, I am persuaded you would have seen that his Celtic and his septentri- onal antiquities are two things entirely distinct. There are, indeed, some learned persons who have taken pains to confound what Caesar and Tacitus have taken pains to separate, the old Druidical or Celtic belief, and that of the old Germans, but nobody has been so learned as to mix the his borough of Castle Rising; and, to excuse it, pretended that his mother, Lady Orford, borrowed the money. This transaction gave so much offence that Macreath was persuaded to sell his seat." — See vol. ii. p. 299. Mr. H. Jesse, in his pleasing edition of Selwyn Correspondence, has given a letter from Macreath to George Selwyn, April, 1768 — he was the proprietor of Whites — announcing that he had quitted business entirely, and let his house to Mr. Chambers, his new relative, and recommending him to patronage. And see vol. i. p. 21G. G. Williams mentions him in a letter to G. Selwyn as one of the betters in Change Alley on the success of Wilkes, when In- stood for the City. " Macreath was the ally, and had various negotiations." ii. 266. 12G LETTERS OE Celtic religion with that of the Goths. Why, Woden himself is supposed not to have been older than Julius Caesar ; but let him have lived when he pleases, it is certain that neither he nor his Valhalla were heard of till many ages after. This is the doctrine of the Scalds, not of the Bards ; these are the songs of Hengist and Horsa, a modern new-fangled belief in com- parison of that which you ought to possess. After all, I shall be sorry to have so many good verses and good chimaBras thrown away. Might we not be permitted (in that scarcity of Celtic ideas we labour under) to adopt some of these foreign whimsies, dropping however all mention of Woden and his Valkhyrian virgins, &c. ? To settle this scruple of conscience, I must refer you to Dr. Warburton: if this should be his opinion (which I doubt), then I go on to tell you (first premising that a dirge is always a funeral sendee sung over persons already dead,) that I would have something striking and uncommon in the measures, the rhythm, and the expression of this Chorus ; the two former are not remarkable here, and the third is so little antiquated, that " murky"* and " dank" look like two old maids of honour got into a circle 1 " Haste with light spells the murky foe to chase." Chor. in Caractacus. TUE POET GRAY. 127 of fleering girls and boys. Now for particulars. I like the first stanza ; the image of Death in arms is very fine and gallant, but I banish " free-born train," and " glory and luxury" here (not the ideas, but the words), and " liberty and freedom's cause," and several small epithets throughout. I do not see how one person can lift the voice of another person. The imagery of the second stanza too is excellent. A dragon pecks! why a cock-sparrow might do as much : in short, I am pleased with the Gothic Elysium. Do not think I am ignorant about either that, or the hell before, or the twilight. I have been there, and have seen it all in Mallet's In- troduction to the History of Denmark (it is in French),* and many other places. " Now they charge," &c. looks as if the coursers rode upon the men. A ghost does not fall. These are all my little objections, but I have a greater. Extreme conciseness of expression, yet pure, perspicuous, and musical, is one of the grand * Northern Antiquities, translated from Mons. Mallet's Introduction a 1' Histoire de Dannemark, 2 vols. 1770. This portion is said to be by Bishop Percy. See Foreign Quarterly Review, No. rv. p. 478; Leyden's Complaynt of Scotland, p. 254; Pinkerton on the Goths, p. 100; Nichols's Illustrations of Literature, vol. viii. p. 314. A new edition, edited by J. A. Blackwell, has been published in Bonn's Antiquarian Library. 128 LETTERS OF beauties of lyric poetry; this I have always aimed at, and never could attain; the necessity of rhyming is one great obstacle to it : another and perhaps a stronger is, that way you have chosen of casting down your first ideas care- lessly and at large, and then clipping them here and there, and forming them at leisure ; this method, after all possible pains, will leave behind it in some places a laxity, a difraseness; the frame of a thought (otherwise well invented, well turned, and well placed) is often weakened by it. Do I talk nonsense, or do you understand me ? I am persuaded what I say is true in my head, whatever it may be in prose, — for I do not pretend to write prose. I am extremely pleased with your fashionable Ode, and have nothing to find fault there, only you must say " portray' st " in the first stanza; and " it looks at best but skin," in the fourth, is not right. I have observed your orders, but I want to shew it everybody. Pray tell me when I may have the credit of doing so. I have never seen a prettier modernism : let it be seen while it is warm. You are in the road to fame ; but do not tell vour name at first, whatever you may venture to do after- wards. Fobus is a treat ; desire Lord Holdernesse to THE POET GRAY. 129 kiss him on both ears for me. I forgive Lord B. for taking the Tudors for the Restoration. Adieu, dear Mason, and remember me ; and remember too that I have neither company, nor pleasure, nor spirits here, and that a letter from you stands in all the place of all these. Adieu ! So you have christened Mr. Dayrolles'* child, and my Lady Y. f they say. Oh ! brave Dupp. X * Mr. Dayrolles was the intimate friend and correspondent of Lord Chesterfield, and the Resident at the Hague. See Chesterfield's Letters in Mary's edition, vol. iv. from 1734 to 1772, more fully published since by Lord Mahon, pp. 101 — 367 ; and Walpole's Misc. Letters, vol. ii. p. 189. He is also mentioned in Walpole's and Mason's Correspondence, vol. i. p. 270, on his daughter having eloped with Leonidas Glover's youngest son. He was protected by the Richmond and Grafton families. From a MS. memorandum of Horace Walpole's, relating to Mr. Dayrolles, I find that some scandal existed with regard to Mr. Stanhope, to whom he was gentle- man at the Hague, and to which Gray silently pointed, in his mention of Mr. Dayrolles' child. f I suppose that Lady Yarmouth is meant. She had a son, called Master Louis, but not owned, 1758. See Walpole's George II. vol. i. p. 177; and his Misc. Corres- pondence, vol. i. Lett. xcix. p. 375 ; and Reminiscences, p. 309; Works, 4to. vol. iv. p. 309. | Thomas Henry, Viscount Dupplin, afterwards Earl of Kinnoul. In 1757 Lord Waldegrave says, " I am now ordered by the King to notify to Sir Thomas Robinson and Lord Dupplin his Majesty's intention of appointing the former K 130 LETTERS OE how comes he to be the Chancellor of the Ex- chequer ? What is going to he now ? LETTER XXXI. THE REV. WILLIAM MASON TO GRAY. Dear Sir, Jan. 16, 1758. I believe you are quite right, as you always are in these matters. But it is a little hard upon my no-reading to believe I have not read Keysler. I have, I assure you, and he led me into the mistake. He has a chapter on the notions the northern nations had of a future state. First of all, he talks of the "Metempsy- chosis," which everybody allows Druidical (ex- cept Pelloutier), and then says, " Illi qui sine aniinarum transmigratione aliam post obitum vitam superesse statuebant, duplices primo animarum sedes faciebant. Alius enim status Secretary of State, and the other Chancellor of the Exchequer. .... Lord Dupplin excused himself as not being equal to so high an employment, even in times of the greatest tranquillity," p. 108. See Grenville Papers, vol. i. p. 190; Rockingham Papers, vol. i. p. 146; Chesterfield's Letters, vol. iv. p. 202; Belsham's Hist. vol. i. p. 245 ; Walpole's Mem. of George II. vol. i. pp. 63, 328, 383-388; vol. ii. pp. 144, 146; vol. iii. p. 6 ; add many notices in Walpole's Misc. Correspondence, vol. iii. pp. 48, 49, 54, 281, 296, &c. THE POET GRAY. 131 erat eorum ante crepusculum dcorum, alius post illud." And then goes on to describe his " Hell," and his " Valhalla." But Sir William Temple set me right about the low date of these ideas, before I received yours ; * I have there- fore laid aside the Ode, and shall make no use of it at all, except perhaps the image of the " armed Death," which is my own, and neither Scaldic nor Runic. And as to this nasty Ger- man, Keysler, who led me to take all this trouble, I will never open him again. The fool was a Eellow of the Royal Society — what could one expect better from him ? But, after all, I do wish indeed that these Odes were all of them finished ; and yet, by what you talk of " mea- sure, and rhythm, and expression," I think I shall never be able to finish them, — never cer- tainly at all if I am not to throw out my ideas at large ; so, whether I am right or wrong, I must have my way in that : therefore talk no more about it. Well, you like my other Ode, however, so I'll turn wit; though that, according to Pope's gradation to plain fool,f should have * See Sir W. Temple "Of Heroic Virtue" and "Of Poetry," on this subject. f Some have at first for wits, then poets passed ; Turn'd critics next, and proved plain fools at last. Pope's Essay on Criticism, i. p. .'!."> k2 132 LETTERS OF come before poetry. However, as times go, it is well it comes anyhow. But hold, I cannot part with " poetry" till it has served me a few friendly turns : and when it has done that it may go to Fobus, if it pleases, or to the devil. One of these friendly turns it has done already, and you will have it inclosed, if my excellent Eraser transcribes it in time. Let me have your strictures speedily, because I want to send it to Wood. Take notice, the lines descriptive of his garden* are strictly peculiar, and White- * See Letter xxvi. — See note in Letter xxiv. to which add, Mr. Robert Wood was the author of the Essay on Homer, the work on the Ruins of Palmyra, &c. appointed Under Secretary of State in 1759 by Mr. Pitt. See Cavendish's Debates, p. 9. He died 1771, aged 59, and was buried in Putney Church. The inscription on his monument was written by Lord Orford. See Chatham Correspondence for his Letters, vol. ii. pp. 246 — 249 ; for his writings see ibid. vol. i. p. 432 ; see also Walpole's George III. vol. i. pp. 276, 363, vol. iv. pp. 3, 185, 345 ; and Walpole and Mason's Correspondence, vol. i. p. 433, with Editor's note. Wood's Essay on Homer Avas published after his death by Jacob Bryant ; for a most acute and learned examination of it see Howes's Critical Obser- vations on Works Antient and Modern, vol. i. p. 1 — 79 ; Howes is the person whom Dr. Parr, in his Notes to the Spital Sermon, calls the Delian Diver, Tov AijXlov Ko\vfi/3riTOv, p. 109, and see Quarterly Review, No. cxlvi. p. 381. In the Preface to the Homer is an entertaining anecdote of Lord Granville (Carteret.) Add Nichols's Literary Anecdotes, THE POET GRAY. 133 head, who has seen the place, tells me they are the very thing : nothing can lie conceived so flowery, so fragrant, and so shady as the fore- ground, nothing more extensive and riant than the offsets. Yet I cannot let this Elegy come to you without hogging that, as you are stout, you will he merciful to it, for I feel for it, somehow, as if it was a favourite child; and I will give you a hundred Druidical Odes to burn in your critical colossus, if you will let it live. Lord! I know nothing of Dupp.'s heing made Chancellor of the Exchequer, unless it is a thing of course after he is made Recorder of Cambridge. Sure you had your intelligence from Mr. Alderman Marshall. Do not believe a word what the papers tell you, that the child's name was Mary, — 'twas Concubinage ; and Dr. Shebbeare is to teach it its catechize. Pray, Mr. Gray, why won't you make your Muse do now and then a friendly turn ? An vol. iii. p. 83; Literary Illustrations, vol. i. p. 144. Dr. R. Laurence gives high praise to Wood's explanation of the rpowal ijeXioio. Horner's Od. xv. 204. " It seems difficult (he says) to determine which is most striking, the simplicity or ingenuity of the explanation." See Enoch Transl. p. 199, by R. Laurence, LL.D. On a work of his on the Troad, of which there were but seven copies printed, see Nichols's Literary Anecdotes, vol. iii. p. 8, and Bibliotheca Grenvilliana, vol. ii. p. 812. 134 LETTERS OF idle slut as she is ! if she was to throw out her ideas never so carelessly it would satisfy soine folks that I know, but I won't name names, and therefore I won't sign all the nonsense I have written. Do you know if Pelloutier ever published a third volume of his " Histoire des Celtes ?" * Dr. W. has onlv sent me two, and I find the third was to contain their ceremonials, which is all I want. Pray direct me to the passage I have seen somewhere, like this, " Est genus hominum 1am umbratile," &c.f I fancv it would make a good motto. If not, " Locus est et pluribus umbris," is no bad one. * Histoire des Celtes, et particulierement des Gaulois, et des Germans, depuis le tems fabuleux, jusqu'a la Prise de Rome par les Gaulois, 2 vols. 4to, 1771, published after the author's death by Chiniac. The former edition was in two vols. 12mo, 1740, 1750, Hague. A very high character is given of his work by Barbier in the Bibliotheque d'un Homme de Gout, vol. iii. p. 385; and see Saxii Onomast. Liter, vol. vii p. 2G6. Under the name Celts Pelloutier strangely includes I)' /tli Gauls and Germans. f Though Cicero more than once alludes to the " Vita um- bratilis et delicata," and other authors have the same or similar expressions, I do not know where the exact sentence which Mason gives is to be found. THE POET GRAY. 135 LETTEE XXXII. TO TIII<: REV. WILLIAM MASON. DEAR MASON, Sunday, Jan. . .,* 1758. I am almost blind with a great cold, and should not have written to you to-day if you did not hurry me to send hack this Elegy. My advices are always at your service to take or to refuse, therefore you should not call them severe. You know I do not love, much less pique myself, on criticism, and think even a had verse as good a thing or better than the best observation that ever was made upon it. I like greatly what you have now sent me, par- ticularly the spirit and sentiment of it ; the disposition of the whole too is natural and elegiac. As to the expression, I would venture to say (did you not forbid me) that it is some- times too easy. The last line I protest against. This, you will say, is worse than blotting out rhymes. The descriptive part is excellent, yet I am sorry for the name of Cutthorpe. I had rather Vertumnus and Flora did not appear in person. The word " lopt" sounds like a * Mason has not given the date of the day of the month in this letter ; but as it was on a Sunday subsequent to the li'ith, it must have been either on the 22nd or the 29th, — most probably the former. 136 LETTERS OF farmer, or a man of taste. " A mountain hoar," " The savage," &c. is a very good line: yet I always doubt if this ungrammatical construc- tion be allowable ; in common speech it is usual, but not in writing even prose ; and I think Milton (though hard pressed by his short metre in the Penseroso) yet finds a way to bring in his that's, his who's, and his which' s* " Fair unfold the wide-spread," &c. ; " fair," is weakly, " wide-spread " is contained in " unfold." By " amber mead," I understand the yellow gleam of a meadow covered with marsh-marigolds and butterflowers, — is it not so ? the two first lines (the second espe- cially) I do not admire. I read, " Did Eancy wake not — refuse one votive strain;" you will ask me why ? I do not know. As to votive, it is like delegated, one of the words you love. I also read, " How well does Memory," &c. — for the same no reason. " It all was his," &c. I like the sense, but it is not sufficiently clear. As to the versification, do not you perceive that you make the pause on the fourth syllable in almost every other line ? * Mason seems to have profited by Gray's judicious cri- ticisms. The name "Cutthorpe" does not appear in the printed copy. " Pierced" is substituted for "lopped." — "That yon wild peak,'' for " savage peak ," &c. THE POET GRAY. 137 Now I desire you would neither think me severe, nor at all regard what I say any further than it coincides with your own judgment ; for the child deserves your partiality ; it is a healthy well-made boy, with an ingenuous countenance, and promises to live long. I would only wash its face, dress it a little, make it walk upright and strong, and keep it from learning paw words. I never saw more than two volumes of Pel- loutier, and repent that I ever read them. He is an idle man of some learning, who would make all the world Celts whether they will or no. Locus est et pluribus umbris* is a very good motto ; you need look no further. I cannot find the other passage, nor look for it with these eyes. Adieu! dear Mason, I am most sincerely yours. You won't find me a place like Mr. Wood's. Elegy I.f " Favour' d steps," useless epithet! Write " choir." Read " rank'd and met." " Cull liv- * See Hor. Ep. lib. i. Ep. v. ver. 28. " Et nisi fcena prior potiorque puella Sabinum Detinet, assumain, locus est et pluribus umbris." t "To a Young Nobleman (Lord John Cavendish) leaving the University, 1753." See Mason's Works, vol. i. p. 93. 138 LETTERS OF ing garlands," &c. too verbose. You love " gar- lands which pride nor gains :" odd construc- tion. " Genuine wreath — Friendship twine ;" a little forced. " Shrink" is usually a verb neuter ; why not " blight" or " blast "? " Per- vid;" read "fervent." "When sad reflec- tion;" read "till sad," &c. " Blest bower," " call on ;" read " call we." " In vain to thee;" read " in vain to him," and "his" for " thy." Oh, I did not see : what will become of " thine?" " Timid " read " fearful." " Dis- creter part;" "honest part" just before " ex- plore." "Vivid," read "warmest." There is too much of the Muse here. " The Muse's genuine wreath," " the Muse's laurel," " the Muse full oft," " the Muse shall come," " the Muse forbids," — five times. Elegy II.* "Laurel-circled;" "laurel-woven" sounds better. " Neglect the strings " is somehow naked : perhaps " That rules my lyre, neglect her wonted strings." Read " re-echo to my strain." " His earliest hlooms " should be " blossoms." " Then to thv sight," "to the sight." Head "he pierced." * This stands as Elegy 111. p. 100, in Mason's Works. THE POET GRAY. 139 "Modestly retire," I do not like. "Tufts*" sounds ill. "To moral excellence:" a remnant of bad books you read at St. John's ; so is the " dig- nity of man." " Of genuine man glowing," a bad line. " Dupe " I do not approve. " Taste " too often repeated. " From that great Guide of Truth," hard and prosaic. Elegy III.* " Attend the strain," " quick surprise," bet- This is placed as Elegy V. (p. 107,) " On the Death of a Lady)," i. e. the beautiful Lady Coventry. In all the eulo- gies on her printed in various publications, and illustrated by commentators, no one has quoted Shenstone's testimoDy to her beauty, Letter xcm. Nov. 25, 1718. " I first saw my Lady Coventry, to whom I believe one must allow all that the world allows in point of beauty ; she is certainly the most unexcep- tionable figure of a woman I ever saw, and made most of the ladies there seem of almost another species." The Morocco Ambassador however (no bad judge of beauty) gave the pre- ference to Lady Caroline Petersham. See . Grenville Papers, vol. i. p. 149, and on Lady Coventry's walking in Hyde Park, attended for her safety by the King's guards, ibid. p. 309. I have seen an original portrait of her at Crome, and of her sister the Duchess of Hamilton. 140 LETTERS OP ter than " sweet." " Luxuriant Fancy, pause," " exulting leap." — Read " The wint'ry blast that sweeps ye to the tomb." " Tho' soon," — query? " His patient stand," better before. Read "that mercy." "Trace then by Reason's," — blot it out. " Dear as the sons," perhaps, " yet neither sons," &c. " They form the phalanx," &c. " Is it for present fame ?" From hence to " peasant's life," the thought seems not just, because the questions are fully as applicable to a prince who does believe the immortality of the soul as to one who does not; and it looks as if an orthodox king had a right to sacrifice his myriads for his OAvn ambition, because they stand a chance of going to heaven, and he of going to hell. Indeed these four stanzas may be spared, without hurting the sense at all. After " brave the torrent's roar," it goes on very well. " Go, wiser ye," &c; and the whole was before rather spun out and weakly.* * Gray's remark, that this Elegy is rather spun out unne- cessarily, is still true, whatever alterations it may have received. But such lines as " With hearts as gay and faces half as fair, THE POET GRAY. 141 LETTER XXXII I. THE REV. WILLIAM MASON TO GRAY. Dear Mr. Gray, Aston, Jan. 22, 1758. I cannot help sending yon a line to desire that, if you can spare a moment from buying and selling South Sea Annuities, taking inven- tories of old china jars and three-legged stools with black feet and grass-green velvet bottoms, you would write me word how you do. I ask not criticisms, nor hints, nor emendations, — these at your leisure, — for my tithes are come in. I live within tolerable compass, and therefore I care not a fig whether Caractacus goes forth or no, even though he should bring me as much as Cleone did to my printer; they both begin with a C. which is a good omen. Since your last I wrote as you bid me (or to speak more grammatically, bad me) to Mr. Ilurd, and read his answer. He says, " I could not but smile at Dr. Wharton's petition. As And— " Some lovelier wonder soon usurp'd the place, Chas'd by a charm still lovelier than the last," would redeem many faults. See a severe and sarcastic review of these elegies by " Martinus Scriblerus" in Monthly Review, vol. xxvii. p. 485; 1763. 142 LETTERS OP what I had to say of that wretch * was no ex- traordinary pass of patience, I may the easier be induced to make a sacrifice of it to humanity. Yet I promise nothing ; there will he time enough to think of this, for the publication is necessarily delayed by the late accident for sometime." This accident was no less than the loss of the MS. of his last Dialogue on the Constitution, by the carelessness of a Leicester bookseller, and he is afraid will not be recovered ; if so, he'll have it all to compose afresh from some loose notes. Tlris you will say is a warning for Caractacus, and indeed it does not suit his dignity to ride post, like a lad newly elected at White's ; he * The "wretch" is the poet Akenside (see page 64 ante). Akenside had given offence to Warburton by a note in the third book of his Pleasures of the Imagination, in which he defended Shaftesbury's maxim, that ridicule is the test of truth. The term wretch was applied by the Hurd and War- burton school to those writers to whom they were opposed. Hurd writes to Warburton this very year, (Jan. 1757,) " I would give a pack of wretches to understand, that your friends can appeal to the Essay as well as they;" and Warburton says in an answer, " A wickeder heart than his (Hume's), and more determined to do public mischief, I think I never knew." See Lett. c. and Kurd's Life of Warburton, p. 64-G8, for further account. Gray did not like Hume either as a moralisl or historian. See Works, vol. v. p. 33. THE POET GRAY. 1 \') shall therefore stay with you, for Hurt! is re- turning to Thurcaston, and I fancy will come to see me ; if not, I will go to see him with my own copy, before I think of publishing. I send you at the bottom a piece of a new stanza for the second Ode. I know not if vou will not think the rhymes too antiquated, or whether it is not a sort of beauty in the place. Most sincerely yours, W. Mason. Every heath and mountain rude* Was mute till then, save from the den Where watch'd some Giant proud. The heifer, cag'd in craggy pen, Lifted her lowings loud ; While her fair firstlings' streaming gore Distain'd the bone-besprinkled floor. Dismal notes ! and answered soon. * These lines do not appear in the text of Caractacus. 144 LETTERS OP LETTER XXXIV.* TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. DEAR MASON, Good Friday, 1758. I have full as much ennui as yourself though much less dissipation, but I cannot make this my excuse for being silent, for I write to you pour me desennuyer, though I have little enough to say. I know not whether I am to condole with you on this Canterbury business, for it is not clear to me that you or the Church are any great losers by it ; if you are be so good as to inform me, and I will be sorry ; however, there is one good thing in it, it proves the family are mortal. You do not seem to discover that Mons. Mal- let f is but a very small scholar, except in the erudition of the Goths. There are, apropos, two * Parts of this letter are taken to form the letter Mason printed under the date December 19, 1757. — Gray's Works, vol. hi. p. 183. t See. on this work (the History of Denmark by Mallet,) Barbier, Bibliotheque d'un Homme de Gout, vol. iv. p. 150. La preface de ce livre merite specialement qn'on s'y arrete. C'est un crand tableau," &c. See also Pinkerton on the Goths, p. 100; Leyden's Complaynt of Scotland, p. 274; Foreign Quarterly Review, iv. p. 478 ; Nichols's Illustrations of Literature, vol. viii. p. 314. THE POET GRAY. 145 Dissertations on the lleligion and Opinions of the Gauls, published in the Memoires de l'Acad. des Belles Lettres et des Inscriptions, vol. XXIV. 4to. one by the Abbe Eenel, in which he would shew that, about Tiberius' and Claudius' times the Druids, persecuted and dis- persed by the Romans, probably retired into Germany, and propagated their doctrines there. This is to account for some similitude to the Gaulish notions which the religion of Germany seems to bear, as Tacitus has described it, whereas Julius Caesar makes them extremely different, who lived before this supposed disper- sion of the Druids ; the other by Monsieur Ereret, is as to shew the reverse of all this, — that there was no such dispersion, no such simili- tude, and that, if Caesar and Tacitus disagree, it is because the first knew nothing but of those nations that bordered on the Rhine, and the other was acquainted with all Germany. I do not know whether these will furnish you with any new matter, but they are well enough written and easilv read. I told you before, that, in a time of dearth, I would venture to borrow from the Edda without entering too minutely on particulars; but, if I did so, I would make each image so clear, that it might be fully un- derstood by itself, for in this obscure mythology L 146 LETTERS OF we must not hint at things, as we do with the Greek fables, that every body is supposed to know at school. However, on second thoughts, I think it would be still better to graft any wild picturesque fable, absolutely of one's own invention, upon the Druid stock ; I mean upon those half-dozen of old fancies that are known to have made their system : this will give you more freedom and latitude, and will leave no hold for the critics to fasten on. Pray, when did I pretend to finish, or even insert passages into other people's works ? as if it were equally easy to pick holes and to mend them. All I can say is, that your Elegy must not end with the worst line in it ; it is flat, it is prose ; whereas that above all ought to sparkle, or at least to shine. If the sentiment must stand, twirl it a little into an apophthegm, stick a flower in it, gild it with a costly expression ; let it strike the fancy, the ear, or the heart, and I am satisfied. Hodges is a sad fellow ; so is Dr. Akenside,* and Mr. Shenstone, our friends and companions. * Gray alludes to the two additional volumes to Dodsley's Collection of Poems, which came out in the year 1758, and contained his two Odes, and some Poems by Mason, Shenstone, Akenside, &c. Gray disliked Akenside, and in general all poetry in blank verse, except Milton: see Works, vol. v. p. 36 THE POET GRAY. 147 Your story of Garrick is a good one ; pray is it true, and what came of it ? did the tragic poet call a guard?* It was I that hindered Mr. Brown from sending the pamphlet. It is nonsense, and that nonsense all stolen from Dr. Stukeley's book about Abury and Stonehenge ; yet if you will have it, you may. Adieu, and let me hear soon from you. I am ever yours, T. G. LETTER XXXV. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. Dear Mason, June 20, 1758. I sympathize with your eyes, having been con- fined at Florence with the same complaint for * This may allude to the disputes with Arthur Murphy regarding The Orphan of China. See Garrick Correspond- ence at the end of the year 1757, and Letters, dated 23rd February, 1758, and 27th May, 1758. See also Davies's Life of Garrick, vol. i. p. 254, and Murphy's Life of Garrick, vol. i. p. 331. Dr. Franklin, in his Dissertation on Ancient Tragedy, 1760, had a note of the grossest abuse on The Orphan of China, in which much malice and rancour were shown. See Monthly Review, 17G0, vol. xxiii. p. 5. Mason's letter, to which this by Gray is an answer, is wanting. Mr. Boaden says, " The true secret of Garrick's objections to the Orphan of China, Cleone, &c, was that the female interest pre- ponderated.' 1 '' See Life of Kemble. L 2 148 LETTERS OF three weeks, but (I hope) in a much worse degree, for, besides not seeing, I could not sleep in the night for pain ; have a care of old women (who are all great oculists), and do not let them trifle with so tender a part. I have been exercising my eyes at Peter- borough, Crowland, Thorney, Ely, &c. ; am grown a great Pen antiquary ; this was the reason I did not answer you directly, as your letter came in my absence. I own I have been all this while expecting Caractacus, or at least three choruses, and now you do not so much as tell me it is finished : sure your spiritual func- tions, and even your attentions to the Duchess of Norfolk and Sir Conyers,* might have allowed you some little intervals for poetry ; if not (now * The Right Honourable Sir Conyers d'Arcy, K.B. younger son of John Lord D'Arcy, by the Hon. Bridget Sutton, only surviving daughter of Robert Lord Lexington. He was ap- pointed Master of the King's Household 1719-20; K.B. 1725; Comptroller of the Household and a Privy Counsellor 1730 ; Lord Lieutenant of the North Riding during the minority of his nephew, Robert Earl of Holdernesse ; M.P. for Richmond from 1728 to 1747, and for Yorkshire from 1747 to his death, in 1758. " Lady M. W. Montagu. — Her father fell in love with Lady Anne Bentinck, who forsook for him Sir Conyers Darcy, who had long been her lover, and on whose despair Rowe wrote the ballad of ' Colin's Complaint.' " — MS. note by Horace Walpole. TLIE POET GRAY. 1 tO Queen Hecuba is gone), I utterly despair, for (say what you will) it was not retirement, it was not leisure, or the summer, or the country, that used to make you so voluminous ; it was emulation, it was rivalry, it was the collision of tragedy against tragedy, that kindled your fires, and set old Mona in a blaze. You do not say who succeeds her Trojan Majesty ;* it ought to be well considered. Let me have none of your prosaic curates. I shall have you write sermons and private forms, and " heaven's open to all men." That old fizzling Duke f is coming here again (but I hope to be gone first,) to hear speeches in his new library, with the Bishop of Bristol, to air his close-stool ; they have fitted it up — not the close-stool, nor the Bishop, but the library, with classes, that will hold anything but books, yet books they must hold, and all the bulky old Commentators, the Synopses and Tractatus Tractatuums, J are washed with white- * Dr. Delap,the author of " Hecuba," who had left Mason's curacy. See note, p. 72. His~ Elegies and Royal Suppliants, reviewed in the Monthly Review. See Index, vol. i. p. 537. f Duke of Newcastle. "The old Hubble-bubble Duke" is 1 >r. Warner's expression for the same peculiarity of manner which Gray describes by fizzling. — See Selwyn's Corr. iv. 283. \ A collection of legal dissertations, " Tractatus nniversi 150 LETTERS OF of-eggs, gilt and lettered, and drawn tip in review before his Grace. Your uncle Balguy takes his doctor's degree, and preaches the commence- ment sermon at Dr. Green's request. Mr. Brown sends his love, and bids me tell you that Dr. "Warburton has sent you his New Legation, with its dedication to Lord Mansfield;* would you have it sent you ? Lord Strathmore goes to-morrow into the North to come of age.f I keep an owl in the garden as like me as it can stare; only I do not eat raw meat, nor bite people by the fingers. This is all the news of the place. Adieu, dear Mason ! and write to me directly if it will not hurt you, or I shall think you worse than you are. I am ever yours, T. G. juris,'" published by Zilettus, the bookseller at Venice in 1564, in 18 folio volumes, usually bound in 25, to which there are additional volumes of Index, making in all 28 folios. * Books i. ii. iii. of The Divine Legation were dedicated to Philip Earl of Hardwicke 1754 (new edition.) The Books iv. v. vi. were dedicated to William Lord Mansfield in 1765 (new edition.) The original Dedications were to the Free Thinkers and to the Jews. f John, ninth Earl of Strathmore and Kinghorne, succeeded to the title 1755, and died in April 1776 ; in 1767 he married the great heiress, daughter of G. Bowes, Esq. of Streatlam Castle, in the western part of the county of Durham. THE POET GRAY. 151 LETTER XXXVI. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. Dear Mason, stoke, August n, 1758. I was just leaving Cambridge at the time when I received your last letter, and have been unfixed and flitting about almost ever since, or you had heard of me sooner. You do not think I could stay to receive Fobus ; no more did Mr. Hurd, he was gone into Leicestershire long before. As to uncle Balguy,* pray do him * Doctor Thomas Balguy, prebendary of Winchester, and archdeacon ; the friend of Warburton and Hurd. See Hurd's Life of Warburton, p. 114; Brydges's Restituta, iv. p. 391; Nichols's Literary Illustrations, vol. vi. p. 683. " The late learned and excellent Dr. Balguy," writes Seward in his Anecdotes, iv. p. 198. Dr. Warton in his Dryden, vol. i. p. 41, thus speaks of his friend: "Dr. Balguy, a man far above the narrow views of party, of an enlarged mind and manly spirit, enriched with a variety of solid learning, which he always imparted in a style pure and energetic. He refused the bishopric of Gloucester, offered him by Lord North. ' The bishopric,' he said, ' has cost me one night's rest, and I de- termined it should not cost me another." See very high praise of him by Dr. S. Parr, in his Warburtonian Tracts, p. 182, who considers Balguy as best fitted " to unfold with precision the character of Warburton." " The history of Warbvrtonfhe says) in the hands of so consummate an artist, would hav< been a most instructive and interesting work, a Tre-rrXoypafym 152 LETTERS OF justice ; he stayed, indeed, to preach the com- mencement sermon, hut he assured me (in secret) it was an old one, and had not one word in it to the purpose. The very next morning he set out for Winchester, and I do really think him much improved since he had his residence there ; freer and more open, and his heart less set upon the mammon of unrighteousness. Apropos, — would you think it? — Fobus has wit. He told Young,* who was invited to supper at Doctor L.'s, and made all the company wait for him, — " Why, Young, you make but an awk- ward figure now you are a bishop ; this time last year you would have been the first man here." I cannot brag of my spirits, my situa- tion, my employments, or my fertility; the days and the nights pass, and I am never the nearer to anything but that one to which we are all tending. Yet I love people that leave some traces of their journey behind them, and have strength enough to advise you to do so Varronis." Balguy left a large and interesting volume of War- burton's Correspondence, which is still in MS. For the very high estimation in which his authority is held in theology, see Hey's Lectures on Divinity, passim. * Philip Yonge, Residentiary of St. Paul's, consecrated Bishop of Bristol 1758 ; translated to Norwich 1761 ; died 1783. He resigned the Public Oratorship in 1752. Mentioned in the last letter. THE POET GRAY. 153 »> while you can. I expect to see " Caractacus completed, not so much from the opinion I entertain of your industry as from the consi- deration that another winter approaches, which is the season of harvest to an author; but I will conceal the secret of your motives, and join in the common applause. The books you inquire after are not worth your knowledge. Parnell* is the dunghill of Irish Grub-street. I did hear who Lancelot Templet was, but * A posthumous volume of Parnell was published in Dub- lin, 1758, since reprinted; see Monthly Review, vol. xix. p. 380. Lintot gave Pope fifteen pounds for the copyright oi Parnell's poems. f A name assumed by Dr. Armstrong, the poet and phy- sician. See his Miscellanies, vol. ii. p. 131 — 259, first pub- lished in 1756; reviewed in Monthly Review, vol. xviii. pp. 5G0 — 5G8. See also Knowles's Life of Fuseli, p. 59, and Campbell's Hist, of Scottish Poetry, 4to, p. 222. Armstrong was very intimate with Fuseli, and travelled with him on the continent ; experiencing the usual fate of travellers, they quarrelled at Genoa, about the pronunciation of a wort/, and parted; but Fuseli visiting Armstrong on his death-bed, they were reconciled. Smith, in his Life of Xollekens, says, Armstrong often noticed Fuseli in the papers of the day with praise (see vol. ii. p. 420, Life of Nollekens): and in his Sketches, v vol. ii. p. 236, Armstrong's works,) there is a pas- sage prophetic of Fuseli's future fame: " This barren age lias produced a genius, not indeed of British growth, unpa- tronised and at present almost unknown, who may live to 154 LETTERS OF have really forgot. I know I thought it was Mr. Greville.* Avon is nothing but a type.f astonish, to terrify, and delight all Europe." There is a vio- lent passage against Armstrong in Churchill's Poems (The Journey), vol. iii. p. 229, ed. 1774, 12mo. See Dr. Beattie's account of this work of Armstrong in Forbes's Life of Beattie, vol. i. p. 203. * Author of Maxims, Characters, and Reflections, 1757. See account of him in Miss Burney's Memoirs of her Father, vol. i. p. 242, vol. ii. p. 101, vol. iii. p. 134; Madame du Deffand's Letters, tome i. pp. 67, 72-82 ; Lady W. Montagu's Letters, vol. iii. p. 102, ed. Wharncliffe ; Boswell's Johnson, vol. viii. p. 305; Walpole's Misc. Lett. vol. iii. p. 210; Jesse's Corr. of Selwyn, vol. i. p. 336 ; and Edinburgh Review, No. cliv. p. 525. Mrs. Greville was Fanny Macartney, the Flora of the Maxims, the author of the Ode to Indifference, and the mother of the beautiful Lady Crewe. She is described in the Maxims under the character of Flora ; Mr. Greville himself under that of Torrismond; Lord Chatham under Praxiteles. Mrs. Montagu figures as Melissa. f " Avon," a poem in three parts, 4to. Birmingham, printed in the new types of Mr. Baskerville. The Monthly Review, 1756, vol. ii. p. 276, says at the end of its notice, " We have premised that this work is printed by Mr. Basker- ville, who obliged the curious and literary world with a spe- cimen of his excellent types in his quarto edition of Virgil. The letter in which the Avon is printed, though very beautiful, is yet in our opinion inferior to that of the Virgil," &c. The Rev. John Cowper, Fellow of Corp. Chr. Cambridge (brother of the poet), says in a letter, Jan. 1786, to Mr. Gough, " A little poem called ' Avon ' has its merit." See Nichols's Literary Anecdotes, viii. p. 562. THE POET GRAY. 155 The Duchess of Queensberry's advertisement * has moved my impatience ; yet, after all, per- haps she may curl her gray hair with her grand- father's golden periods. Another object of my * The Public Advertiser, July 10, 1758.—" Whereas a spurious, incorrect edition of a work represented to contain the history of the reign of his Majesty King Charles the Second, from the Restoration to the end of the year 1667, by the late Lord Chancellor Clarendon, has been attempted to be imposed on the public; to prevent which, their Graces the Duke and Dutchess of Queensberry have preferred a bill in the High Court of Chancery, and obtained an injunction to restrain the printing and publishing the same ; and, in order to prevent the abuse which will arise to the public from such a publication, they think it incumbent on them to signify that a correct edition from the original manuscript in the hand of Lord Chancellor Clarendon, of his Lordship's life, from his birth to his banishment (and which includes the history of the Last Seven Years attempted to be imposed on the public,) is now preparing for the press, and will soon be published, the profits of which have been appropriated by the family for a public benefaction to the University of Oxford." The Duchess was the wife of Douglas third Duke of Queensberry. She was the friend of Pope, and patroness and protector of Gay, for whom she quarrelled with the Court. She retained in age the dress of her youth, which was one of her many eccentricities. She died in 1772. See Horace Walpole's Letters, March 2, 1774; and a Letter from her in the Grenville Papers, vol. ii. p. 424, and note. Her name is preserved in the verse of Pope on Gay: Of all thy blameless life the sole return, My verse and Queensberry weeping o'er thy urn. 150 LETTERS OF wishes is, the King of Prussia's account of the Campaign, which Niphausen talked of six weeks ago as just coming over, hut it is not come ; perhaps he waits for a hetter catastrophe. The Twickenham Press is in labour of two or three works (not of the printer's own). One of them is an Account of Russia by a Lord Whitworth,* who, I think, was minister there from King William. I seem to have told you all I know, which you will think very little, but a nihilo nil fit. If I were to coin my whole mind into phrases they would profit you nothing, nor fill a mode- rate page. Compassionate my poverty, show yourself noble in giving me better than I bring, and ever believe me Most sincerely yours, T. G. * This little work was printed at Strawberry Hill in 1758. See Walpole's Misc. Lett. vol. iii. pp. 403, 411. The MS. was given by Richard Owen Cambridge, Esq., who had purchased Mr. Zolmari's Library, which related solely to Russian History. In the Preface, written by Walpole, some account may be found of Lord Whitworth. The title is, " Account of Russia as it was in 1710." See a favourable review of it in Monthly Review, xix. pp. 439 — 444 ; but the reviewer, before he marked the errata, should have known that blue (the colour) was always spelt blew at that time. Thus Gray spelt it in his bitters. THE POET GRAY. 157 I find you missed of Stonhewer by going to Sir Conyers Darcy's. Can you tell me if he is still at Harrowgate, for I do not know how to direct to him there ? LETTER XXXVH. TO THE REV. MR. BROWNE. Dear Sir, Sept. 7, 1758. It is always time to write (whether Louis- bourg* be taken or not), and I am always alike glad to hear from you. I am glad however to repay you with "the King of Prussia:" there is a man for you at a dead lift, that has beat and baffled his three most powerful f enemies, who had swallowed him up in idea : not that I look * " Louisbourg is an important conquest. It will strengthen Mr. Pitt, and enable him to struggle more successfully against corruption." — Warburton to Hurd, Sept. 3, 1758, Letter cx.w It was taken on 27th July, 1758, after forty-nine days' siege. See account of it in Mr. Jenkinson's Letter in Grenville Papers, i. 258. f His three powerful enemies were France, Austria, and Russia. " The threats," writes Sir C. Williams, the Ambas- sador at Petersburg, " of the three greatest powers in Europe, instead of frightening him from his designs, made him exe- cute them more easily. His plan and execution of it are alike his own." — See Works, iii. p. 106, 158 LETTERS OF upon this last exploit, however seasonable, as his most heroic exploit : I suppose it was only- butchering* a great flock of slaves and savages, a conquest that, but for the necessity of it, he would have disdained. What use our little supply is like to be of in Germany I cannot say. I only know that my Lord Granby, with his horse, had a bridge which broke under them, and that he (the Marquess) was sore bruised and laid up; but I think the Electorate may be saved for all this. Old Pa. wrote to me from Scarborough three weeks ago;+ he had seen more in his journey * This alludes to the King of Prussia's victory over the Russian army at Zorndorf, Aug. 25 ; " as the Prussians gave no quarter, the slaughter was terrible." See Smollett, vol. iv. pp. 331 — 333; Grenville Papers (Mr. Jenkinson to Mr. Gren- ville), vol. i. p. 263 ; also Shenstone's Letters, iii. p. 307. " On the regular destruction of 15 or 20,000 wretches on the field; Mr. Cambridge was considering the massacre rather in a philosophical than political view; and indeed it does not appear to me that plague, earthquake, or famine are more pernicious to the human race than what the world calls heroes.''' 1 f See Gray's Letters, vol. iii. Letter lxxxv. p. 204, Sept. 6, 1758, to Mr. Palgrave. The Rev. William Palgrave, LL.B. 17G0, of Pembroke College, Cambridge, of an ancient Norfolk house, Rector of Palgrave thirty-three years, and of Thrandes- ton forty years, both in Suffolk, died suddenly at Brightelm- stone, Nov. 5, 1799, aged sixty-four years. He is buried in Palgrave church in the chancel, within the altar-rail ; a flat THE POET GRAY. 159 than ever he saw before in his life, and was to see twice as much more in his way to Glamis. stone covers his grave. The rectory house is much altered since Palgrave's time. The garden was said to be laid out by- Mason, and a sequestered alcove still remains, bearing the name of " the Poet's Corner." My late friend the Rev. William Alderson was the last survivor of those who personally remembered Mr. Palgrave. He used to meet him during his visits at Aston, and described him as a person of small sta- ture, neat in his appearance, agreeable and clever in conver- sation, and a very pleasant companion. He was much esteemed by his parishioners at Palgrave, charitable to the poor, and performed with care the duties of his parish. A little singularity was given to his figure by his head being drawn aside towards the shoulder, which was the occasion of a ludicrous circumstance still remembered in his parish hap- pening to him from a fall when hunting. Mr. Alderson men- tioned to the writer of this note one or two specimens of his quick and lively repartees, but these eVea xrepoevra, — " the winged messengers from mind to mind,'* — lose their graces when fixed on paper. Mr. Palgrave's elder brother assumed the name of Sayer, and married Miss Tyrrell of Gip- ping, afterwards Lady Mary Haselrigge. To his younger brother the Rev. William Palgrave, who is the subject of this note, it is said Mr. Lawson of Boroughbridge is indebted for a small but valuable collection of antiquities collected during Mr. Palgrave's travels in Italy with his friend Mr. Weddell of Newby (who at that time made the collection of statues now belonging to Lord de Grey). Mr. Lawson has also Mr. Palgrave's journal, undertaken by Gray's advice. See Gray's Letter to Mr. Palgrave on his Tour. " Quodcumque videris, scribe et describe, memoria ne fide," vol. iv. p. 106: whether 160 LETTERS OF He is become acquainted with rocks and pre- cipices, and despises the tameness and insipidity of all we call fine in the South. Mr. Pitt and he did not propose being at Glamis till the end of August. If I had been at the great gambling dinner, I should have desired somebody would help me to a collop of the other great turtle, though I believe it is vile meat. You tell me nothing about the good family at Kipton, that were to come together from all quarters* and be so happy this summer ; has any ill chance hindered their meeting, or have you not paid them a visit this vacation ? It is an infinite while since I heard from Mason ; I know no more of him than you do ; but I hope Caractacus will profit of our losses ; if pleasure or application take up his thoughts I am half content. My health I cannot complain of, but as to my spirits they are always many degrees below the expression in the following precept is classically correct may admit a doubt, " Tritum viatorum compitum calca." Mr. Palgrave is often mentioned in Walpole's Letters to Mason in a very friendly manner. See vol. ii. p. 161, &c. &c. * Nicholas Bonfoy, Esq. married Elizabeth, a daughter of William Hall, Esq. of King's Walden. She was one of a family of ten sons and four daughters ; he resided at Abbot's Ripton, in the county of Huntingdon, where the descendants are still situated. See note to Letter xi. p. 38. THE POET GRAY. 161 changeable, and I seem to myself to inspire everything around me with ennui and dejection ; but some time or other all these things must come to a conclusion, till which day I shall remain very sincerely yours, T. G. Commend me to any that inquire after me, particularly Mr. Talbot. LETTER XXXVin. TO THE REV. MR. BROWNE. Dear Sir, Oct. 28, 1758. You will not imagine me the less grateful for the long letter you were so good to write me some time since, because I have omitted to answer it, especially if you know what has since happened. Mrs. Rogers died in the end of September ; and what with going to town to prove her will and other necessary things, what with returning back hither to pay debts, make inventories, and other such delightful amuse- ments, I have really been almost wholly taken up. I might perhaps make a merit even of writing now, if you could form a just idea of my situation, being joint executor with another M 162 LETTERS OE aunt, who is of a mixed breed between and the Dragon of Wantley. So much for her. I next proceed to tell you that I saw Mason in town, who stayed there a day on my account, and then set out (not in a huff) with a laudable resolution to pass his winter at Aston, and save a curate.* My Lordf has said something to him, which I am glad of, that looked like an excuse for his own dilatoriness in preferring him ; but this is a secret. He told me he had seen you, and that you were well. Dr. Wharton con- tinues dispirited, but a little better than he was. The first act of Caractacus is just arrived here, but I have not read it over. I am very disagreeable; but who can help that ? Adieu, my best Mr. Browne ; I am ever yours, T. G. I shall hardly be at Cambridge before Christ- mas. I recollect that it is very possible you may have paid my bills ; if so, pray inform me what they amount to, that I may send the money when I get to London, or sooner, if you please. * I presume that lie did so ; for there appears a vacancy in the curacy between Mr.*Delap's leaving Aston, and Mr. Wood coming in 1759, by the Aston Register. | Lord Iloldernesse. THE POET GRAY. 163 LETTER XXXIX. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. Dear Mason, Stoke, Nov. 9, 1758. I should have told you that Caradoc came safe to haud, but my critical faculties have been so taken up in dividing nothing with "The Dragon of Wantley's Dam,"* that they are not yet composed enough for a better and more tranquil employment ; shortly, however, I will make them obey me. But am I to send this copy to Mr. Hurd, or return it to you ? Methinks I do not love this travelling to and again of manuscripts by the post. While I am writing, your second packet is just arrived. I can only tell you in gross that there seem to me certain passages altered, which might as well have been let alone ; and that I shall not be easily reconciled to Mador's own song. I must not have my fancy raised to that agree- able pitch of heathenism and wild magical enthusiasm, and then have you let me drop into moral philosophy and cold good sense. I remember you insulted me when I saw you last, and affected to call that which delighted * Mrs. Olliffe was " the other aunt," and was joint executor with Mr. Gray. See his Letter to Dr. Wharton, lxxxviii. vol. iii. p. 210, on this subject. M 2 164 LETTERS OF my imagination nonsense. Now I insist that sense is nothing in poetry but according to the dress she wears, and the scene she appears in. If you should lead me into a superb Gothic building with a thousand clustered pillars, each of them half a mile high, the walls all covered with fretwork, and the windows full of red and blue saints, that had neither head nor tail, and I should find the Venus of Medici in person perked up in a long niche over the high altar, as naked as ever she was born, do you think it would raise or damp my devotions ? I say that Mador must be entirely a Briton, and that his pre-eminence among his companions must be shown by superior wildness, more barbaric fancy, and a more striking and deeper har- monv, both of words and numbers. If British antiquity be too narrow, this is the place for invention ; and if it be pure inven- tion, so much the clearer must the expression be, and so much the stronger and richer the imagery — there's for you now.* I am sorry to hear you complain of your eyes. Have a care of candle-light, and rather play at hot-cockles with the children than either read or write. Adieu ! I am truly and ever yours, T. Gr. * " The fourth Ode was afterwards new written." — Mason. THE POET GRAY. 165 LETTER XL. THR REV. WILLIAM MASON TO GRAY. Dear Mr. Gray, 1758. I received your last, but, as I had before sent you iny second Ode, I was in hopes to have heard again, with your particular remarks on that. Observe, the second stanza, that is, the first antistrophe, I intend to alter on account of the sameness of imagery with one in Melan- choly; but I hope the rest will stand, some words excepted. I will attempt a new Mador's song to please you, but, in my own mind, I would not have Mm sing there at all on account of the tout ensemble, for he sings all the second Ode, and also all the fourth, so I am afraid he will be hoarse. I like the idea of my fourth Ode much, and the preparation to it. It is the speech of an Armed Death to the Britons, who Mador is supposed to see and hear just at the onset of the battle. Thus — Chorus. but why is this ? Why doth our brother Mador snatch his harp From yonder bough ? why this way bend his steps ? 166 LETTERS OF Cakactacus. He looks entranced. The fillet bursts that bound His liberal locks; his snowy vestments fall In ample folds, and all his floating form Doth seem to glisten with divinity. Yet is he speechless. Say, thou chief of bards, What is there in this airy vacancy That thou, with fiery and irregular glance, Should scan thus wildly? wherefore heaves my breast? Why starts ■ Ode. Hark ! heard ye not yon footsteps dread, That shook the earth with thundering tread? 'Twas Death ; in haste The warrior pass'd; High tower'd his helmed head, I mark'd his mail, I mark'd his shield : I spy'd the sparkling of his spear, I saw his giant arm the falchion wield; Courage was in his van and Conquest in his rear.* And so it goes on, but without a word of Odin and Walhalla ; yet the general Celtic principle of the happiness of dying in battle is touched upon, which, I hope, is not in itself too Scaldic. * See last Chorus in Caractacus, Hark ! heard ye not yon footstep dread, &c. But how Death should be wielding at the same time both a sword and a spear, is not very easy to determine. I spy'd the sparkling of his spear, I saw his giant arm the falchion wield. THE POET GRAY. 167 I send you with this another packet, and I have another ready to follow it. Then I get to my third Ode, and, when that is done, I shall have little more than transcription. When you have all the MS. I would have you keep it till I write about sending it to Mr. Hurd ; pro- bably we may contrive it without posting. Do excuse all this Caractacation. I am seriously desirous of getting quit of him, and therefore must trouble you till I do. Mr. Brown has writ me a long letter about keeping my Divinity Act, which, he says, I must do next March. Do you say so too ? If you do I will incontinently drown myself ; till when, I remain, sincerely yours, W. Mason. My eyes, by blistering, are well again. LETTER XLI. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. DEAR MASON, London, Jan. 18, 1759. You will think me either dead, or in that happy state which is that of most people alive, of forgetting every thing they ought to remem- 168 LETTERS OF ber ; yet I am neither one nor the other. I am now in town, having taken leave of Stoke, and hoping to take leave of my other incumbrances in a few months hence. I send you in short my opinion of Caractacus, so far, I mean, as I have seen of it ; I shall only tell you further, that I am charmed with the idea you give me of your fourth Ode ; it is excellently introduced, and the specimen you send me even sublime. I am wrapped in it ; but the last line of the stanza falls off, and must be changed, " Courage was in his van," &c. for it is ordinary when compared with the rest ; to be sure, the immor- tality of the soul and the happiness of dying in battle are Druid doctrines ; you may dress them at pleasure, so they do but look wild and British. I have little to say from hence but that Cleone* has succeeded very well at Covent Gar- * Written by Dodsley, and acted in 1758 at Covent Garden. In a manuscript Letter from Lord Chesterfield to Dodsley on the intended performance of this play, he says, " You should instruct the actors not to mouth out the Y in the name of Siffroy, as if they were crying oysters." A high character is given of the play in Anderson's Life of Dodsley. It was shown to Pope, who advised the extension of its plan, and it was praised by Dr. Johnson in terms that seemed to place it above Otway. The prologue was written by Melmoth, the epilogue by Shenstone. See on this play Davies's Life of Garrick, vol. i. p. 251, and Shenstone's Letters, vol. iii. xcm. THE POET GRAY. 169 den, and that people who despised it in manu- script went to see it, and confess — they cried so. For fear of crying too I did not go. Poor Smart* is not dead, as was said, and Merope t is acted for his benefit this week, with a new farce, " The Guardian." J Here is a very agreeable opera of Cocchi's, the " Cyrus," § which gave me some p. 289; and a judicious and fair notice in Monthly Review, vol. xix. p. 582. See also Garrick Correspondence, vol. i. p. 79 ; and Boaden's Life of Kemble, vol. i. p. 340. Life of Siddons, ii. p. 214; and note in Lett, xxxiv. Dodsley men- tions it in a Letter to Dr. Warton as Avritten in 1754. See Wooll's Life of Warton, p. 225. * See Anderson's Life of Smart. He was admitted of Pembroke HaU Oct. 30, 1739, elected Fellow 1745, M. A. 1747. See Gray's Letter to Dr. Wharton on his works (vol. iii. p. 4), written in great kindness to one of the most unfor- tunate among the sons of genius. f Written by Aaron Hill. See Baker's Biog. Dram. vol. ii. p. 230, where a high character is given of this play. It was acted in 1749, and said to be chiefly borrowed from the Merope of Voltaire. X A farce written by Garrick, acted 1759, in two acts, and taken in great measure from the Pupille of Mons. Fagan. See Critical Review, vol. vii. p. 171. "On doit sur- tout regarder ' La Pupille ' comme le chef d'oeuvre de cet auteur." See Barbier Bibliotheque, vol. ii. p. 146. § " II Ciro Riconosciuto " is the title of an opera composed by Cocchi, produced at the King's Theatre in 1759, and said by Dr Burney to be the best of Cocchi's productions during his residence in England. In the British Museum is 170 LETTERS OF pleasure ; do you know I like both Whitehead's Odes* in great measure, but nobody else does. I hear matters will be made up with the Dutch, and there will be no war. The King of Portugal t has slily introduced troops into Lis- bon, under pretence of clearing away the rub- bish, and seized the unsuspecting conspirators in their own houses ; they are men of principal note, in particular the family of Tavora, who have some pretensions to the crown ; and it is thought the Jesuits hare made use of their ambition to execute their own revenge. The a copy of the opera in Italian and English, as used in the theatre at the time ; and it is curious to observe how mate- rially it varies from the text of the Ciro Eiconosciuto in the modern editions of Metastasio's works. The wording of whole scenes is different. * " I don't dislike the Laureate at all; to me it is his best Ode, but I don't expect every one should find it out; for Othbert and Ateste are surely less known than Edward the First and Mount Snowdon. It is no imitation of me, but a good one of ' Pastor, cum traheret,' &c. which was falsely laid to my charge." See Works, vol. iii. p. 212, Lett, lxxxix. Gray alludes to the two Laureate Odes for 1758 and 1759. See Whitehead's Works, vol. ii. p. 261-267. f On this singular conspiracy and attempt at assassination see Belsham's History of England, vol. iv. p. 435; vol. v. p. 61; Adolphus's Hist. vol. i. p. 60; Smollett, vol. iv. p. 959; Walpole's History of George II. vol. iii. p. 141; Misc. Letters vol. iii. pp. 402, 432. THE POET GRAY. 171 story of the king's gallantries, and the jealousy of some man of quality, who contrived the as- sassination, is said to be all false. Adieu ! I rejoice to hear you use your eyes again. Write to me at Dr. Wharton's, for perhaps I may go to Cambridge for some weeks, and he will take care I shall have your letter. LETTER XLIL THE REV. WILLIAM MASON TO GRAY. DEAR SlR, Aston, Jan. 25, 1759. I sent an impatient letter to you (to use Mr. Mincing' s epithet to dinner) at Stoke, and, the day after it went, received yours from London, with its accompaniment of criticisms, for which a thank severally, and ten apiece for every emendation, that is to say, every alteration. Yet I cannot help thinking that if you had not seen the joint critique from Prior Park,* you would not have judged so hardly of some of my new lines. True I did not think every thing that all my critics have remarked neces- sary to be altered ; yet I altered them for this reason : Critics, like Indians, are proud of the * The joint critique of Dr. Warburton and Rev. Mr. Hurd. 172 LETTERS OE number of scalps they make in a manuscript ; and if you don't let them scalp, they will do you no service. However, it appears I have scalped myself in some places, particularly at the beginning. Yet I cannot help thinking that " chills the pale plain beneath him " is an improvement. Yet I can unscalp, if you bid me. There is one unfortunate thing which attends showing either a marked or an altered manuscript, and you yourself prove it to me. The person that reads it regards only the marks and alterations, and considers whether they are right or wrong, and hence a number of faulty passages in the gross escape his observation. I remember I showed " Caractacus " this sum- mer to a certain critic, who read it all over, and returned it me with this single observation : " I have read it, and I think those faults which are marked with a pencil ought to be altered." I was surprised at this, because I did not know the MS. was marked at all at that time. I examined it, and found here and there about seven or eight almost invisible little XX. I could not conceive who had done it ; I asked Delap if he had, and he cried peccavi, assuring me he only did it to remember to tell me of some minutiae which he thought inaccurate; but that he thought he had almost made them THE POET GRAY. 173 invisible. So quick-sighted is the eye of a critic. But to proceed. I agree to almost all your criticisms, however they make against me. Your absolution from Mador's song makes amends for all. Yet I am sorry about the scene between Evelina and Elidurus ; it is what the generality will think the principal scene, and which yet is not as it should be. I am afraid of making it more pathetic, and yet if it is not so, it will not satisfy. I send you with this my third Ode; you will find it must be inserted soon after the descrip- tion of the rocking-stone, and the last line of the sheet I send you will connect with this, " So certain that on our absolving tongues Rests not that power may save thee." Caractacus, p. 124; Mason's Works. so that a few lines must be cancelled in the copy you have ; my reason for this change is, that I myself thought (and nobody else), that a lustration ode would take up too much time in the place first intended, and that the action went on too slow there. I shall therefore show more of Caractacus himself in the scene subse- quent to the next I shall send you, and I am pretty sure that ftoutes ensembles considered) this will be an improvement. As to this Ode, 174 LETTERS OF I do not expect you to like it so well as you do the second ; yet I hope it is well enough, and will have some effect in the place it conies in. Explicit Pars Poesecos, 8f incipit Pars Chit- chatices. — I dare not face Rutherforth,* that saintly butcher, in his purple rohes of divinity, and therefore, sorely against good Mr. Brown's gizzard, I have given up my fellowship, and this post carries my civilities to Dr. Long con- cerning this great resignation. Indeed, if I could dispute hlack into white, like my uncle Balguy, this act would have fallen out too un- luckily for me to have thought of keeping it, for I am resolved not to set my face southward these several months, not even if I puhlish this spring, for I'll either have the sheets sent down to me or get somehody in town to correct the press. Do you think either Dr. Wharton or Stonehewer could be prevailed on to take this trouble ? You are perpetually twitting me about * Thomas Rutherford, D.D. of St. John's College, Eegius Professor of Divinity, 1756, succeeded by Richard Watson, D.D. 1771. He was the author of Natural Philosophy and Institutes of Natural Law, and other works, a list of which may be seen in the Biographical Dictionary. See Hey's Lec- tures on Divinity, vol. i. p. 469; Nichols's Illustrations of Literary History, vol. i. p. 134. A copious account of him and his works may be seen in the Index to Nichols's Literary Anecdotes, vol. vii. p. 362. THE POET GRAY. 175 my motive of gain ; could I write half as well as Rousseau I would prove to you that this is the only motive any reasonable man should have in this matter ; but pray distinguish the matter (I mean gain is not my only motive for writing, God forbid it should). I write for fame, for posterity, and all sort of fine things, but gain is my only motive for publishing ; for I publish to the present age, whom I would fleece, if I could, like any Cossack, Calmuck, or Carcol- spack. Now do you understand me, and, if you do, don't you agree with me ? This resus- citation of poor Smart pains me ; I was in hopes he was safe in that state where the best of us will be better than we are, and the worst I hope as little worse as infinite justice can per- mit. But is he returned to his senses ? if so, I fear that will be more terrible still. Pray, if you can dispose of a guinea so as it will in any sort benefit him (for it is too late for a ticket),* give it for me. My best regard to Dr. Wharton and Mrs. if this finds you there. You will find from my last letter that Hurd is disposed to gratify the Doctor's humanity. f Have you seen * In this year (1759) Garrick made Smart an offer of a free benefit at Drury Lane Theatre : he had but lately been released from confinement ; to which Mason alludes. f See Letter xxxm. p. 135. 176 LETTERS OF Jortin's "Life of Erasmus?"* was there ever such a lumbering slovenly book ? I shall not send a packet till I hear again from you ; do not be long first. LETTER XLIH. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. DEAR MASON, Cambridge, March 1, 1759. Did I tell you I had been confined in town with the gout for a fortnight ? well, and since I came hither, it is come again. Yesterday I came abroad again, for the first time, in a great shoe, and very much out of humour ; and so I must return again in three days to town about business, which is not like to add much to the * On this work see Walpole's Miscellaneous Letters, vol. iii. p. 401, who "considers it written with great moderation and goodness of heart," and p. 407 ; and Coleridge's Friend, vol. i. p. 226. Mr. Barham, in his Life of Reuchlin, says, " Jortin has made an amusing book out of the Life of Erasmus; though, but superficially versed in the literary history of the sixteenth century, he rarely ventures beyond the text of Erasmus and Le Clerc without stumbling," p. 251. See Monthly Review, vol. xix. pp. 385 — 399, and vol. xxiii. pp. 195 — 204, for a severe review of the second volume. THE POET GRAY. 177 sweetness of my temper, especially while stocks are so low. I did not remember ever to have seen the joint criticism* from Prior Park that yon speak of, so little impression did it make ; nor should I believe now that I had ever seen it, did I not recollect what a prejudice the parsons expressed to human sacrifice, which is quite agreeable to my way of thinking ; since Caractacus con- vinced me of the propriety of the thing, it is certain that their fancies did in no sort influence me in the use of my tomahawk. Now you must know I do not much admire the chorus of the rocking-stone, nor yet much disapprove it ; it is grave and solemn, and may pass. I insist, however, that " deigns" (though it be a rhyme) should be " deign' st," and " fills" " fill'st," and " bids" " bid'st." Do not blame me, but the English tongue. The beginning of the antistrophe is good. I do not like " mean- dring way," " Where Vice and Folly stray," nor the word " sprite." The beginning too of the epode is well ; but you have used the epi- * Of Ilurd and Warburton. See Walpole's Miscell. Letters, vol. iii. pp. 465-7. See also p. 171, Letter xlii. N 178 LETTERS OF thet "pale" before in a sense somewhat similar, and I do not love repetitions. The line " Or magic numbers " interrupts the run of the stanza, and lets the measure drop too short. There is no beauty in repeating " ponderous sphere." The two last lines are the best.* The sense of your simile about the " distant thunder " is not clear, nor well expressed ; be- sides, it implies too strong a confession of guilt. The stanza you sent me for the second Ode is very rude ; and neither the idea nor verses touch me much. It is not the gout that makes me thus difficult. Finish but your Death-song as well as you imagined and begun it, and mind if I won't be more pleased than anybody. Adieu ! dear Mason, I am ever truly yours, T. G. Did I tell you how well I liked Whitehead's two Odes ? they are far better than any thing he ever wrote, f * By reference to the poem it will be seen that Mason adopted some of Gray's proposed alterations and rejected others. In the collected edition of Mason's Works, 4 vols, 8vo. 1811, this chorus will be found, vol. ii. p. 122. f Ode for his Majesty's Birth-day and Ode for the New Year, 1759. See Whitehead's Works, vol. ii. pp. 261-7, note. THE POET GRAY. 179 Mr. Brown* and Jemmy Bickham t lament your indolence, as to the degree, in chorus ; as to me, I should have done just so for all the world. LETTER XLIV. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. Dear Mason, April 10, 1759. This is the third return of the gout in the space of three months, and worse than either of the former. It is now in a manner over, and I am so much the nearer being a cripple, but not at all the richer. This is my excuse for long silence ; and, if you had felt the pain, * Rev. James Brown, the friend and executor of Gray, was Fellow and Tutor of Pembroke College, A.B. 1729, A.M. 1733, and President, and afterwards Master of the College, 1770 ; died 1784. Cole, in his Athena? Cantab, says of him, " He is a very worthy man, a good scholar, small, and short- sighted." There is a letter from him to Lord Chatham, giving an interesting account of his second son, the great future minister, who was placed at his College of Pembroke. — See Chatham Corr. vol. iv. p. 311. f James Bickham, Fellow of Emanuel College, A.B. 1740, A.M. 1744. See Letter xx. p. 84. " Bickham, the junior tutor, was a bold man, and had been a bruiser when yotuig " See Add. to the Life of R. Farmer in Nichols's Anec. viii. 12 1 N 2 180 LETTERS OF you would think it an excuse for a greater fault. I have been all the time of the fit here in town, and doubtless ought to have paid my court to you and to Caractacus. But a critic with the gout is a devil incarnate, and you have had a happy escape. I cannot repent (if I have really been any hindrance) that you did not publish this spring. I would have it mellow a little longer, and do not think it will lose any thing of its flavour ; to comfort you for your loss, know that I have lost above 2001. by selling stock. I half envy your situation and your im- provements (though I do not know Mr. Wood),* yet am of your opinion as to prudence; the more so because Mr. Bonfoy tells me he saw a letter from you to Lady H.,t and that she expressed a sort of kindness ; to which my Lord added, that he should write a rattling epistle to you that was to fetch you out of the country. Whether he has or not don't much signify : I would come and see them. I shall be here this month at least against my will, unless you come. Stonhewer is here with all his sisters, the youngest of which has * The author of the Essay on Homer. + Lady Holdernesse. THE POET GRAY. 181 got a husband. Two matches more (but in a superior class) are going to be soon : * — Lord Weymouth to the Duchess of Portland's homely daughter, Lady Betty, with £35,000 ; and Lord Waldegrave to Miss Maria "VValpole, with £10,000. It is impossible for two handsomer people ever to meet.f All the cruelties of Portugal are certainly owing to an amour of the King's (of long standing) with the younger Marquess of Tavora's wife.f The Jesuits made their advan- tage of the resentments of that family. The disturbances at Lisbon are all false. This is my whole little stock of news. Here is a very pretty opera, the Cyrus ;§ and * Thomas third Viscount Weymouth on May 22, 1759, married the Lady Elizabeth Cavendish Bentinck, eldest daugh- ter of William second Duke of Portland. | In 1759 he (Lord Waldegrave) married the natural daughter of Sir Edward Walpole, a lady of great beauty and merit. See Editor's Preface to Waldegrave's Memoirs, p. xv. She afterwards married William Henry Duke of Gloucester, brother of King George the Third. | See note on Letter xli. p. 171. § On the Cyrus, see Burney's History of Music, iv. 476 ; an opera of Cocchi, the last of his productions during his resi- dence in England. Cocchi used to say of the English taste — " E molto particulare, ma gli Inglesi non fanno conto d'alcuna cosa, se' non e benpagata. See note, p. 171. 182 LETTERS OF here is the Museum, which is indeed a treasure. The trustees lay out 1,4007. a-year, and have but 9001. to spend. If you would see it you must send a fortnight beforehand, it is so crowded. Then here are Murdin's Papers, * and Hume's History of the Tudor s, and Ro- bertson's History of Mary Stuart and her son, and what not. Adieu, dear Mason. I am most faithfully yours, T. G. LETTER XLV. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. Dear Mason, July 23, 1759. I was alarmed to hear the condition you were in when you left Cambridge, and, though Mr. Brown had a letter to tell him you were mending apace while I was there, yet it would give me great pleasure to hear more particu- larly from yourself how you are. I am just * " A Collection of State Papers in the reign of Queen Elizabeth, from 1571 to 1596, from the Library at Hatfield House; by William Murdin, &c." folio, 1759. The collection is a continuation of that published l>y Dr. Ilaynes in 1740 THE POET GRAY. 183 settled in my new habitation in Southampton Row ; and, though a solitary and dispirited creature, not unquiet, nor wholly unpleasant to myself. The Museum will he my chief amuse- ment.* I this day passed through the jaws of a great leviathan, that lay in my way, into the belly of Dr. Templeman,f superintendent of the reading-room, who congratulated himself on the sight of so much good company. We were, — a man that writes for Lord Royston; a man that writes for Dr. Burton, of York ; t a third that writes for the Emperor of Germany, or Dr. Pocock,§ for he speaks the worst English I ever heard ; Dr. Stukeley, who writes for him- * Compare Gray's letter to Mr. Palgrave, July 24, 1759, Works, vol. iii. p. 219. f Dr. Peter Templeman held the office of Keeper of the Res i ding-room for the British Museum from its opening in I7.~>8 till 1761, when he resigned, on being chosen Secretary of the Society of Arts, then newly established. Dr. Temple- man was a medical man and a learned one ; author of several medical works and the translator of Norden's Egypt, to which he added notes. He died in 17G9. There is a memoir of him in Heathcote's Biographical Dictionary, which has been noticed by Chalmers. X John Burton, M.D. born at York, 1C97; died 1771: among other works he published Monasticon Eboracense, vol. i. York, 1758. folio. § Dr. Richard Pocock, Bishop of Ossory, 1756, and of Meath, 1765; published Travels in the East, and other works. 1S1 LETTERS OF self, the very worst person he could write for ;* and I, who only read to know if there were any thing worth writing, and that not without some difficulty. I find that they printed one thou- sand copies of the Harleian Catalogue, and have sold four score ; that they have 900/. a-year income, and spend 1,300/., and that they are building apartments for the under-keepers, so I expect in winter to see the collection adver- tised, and set to auction. Have you read the Clarendon book ?f Do you remember Mr. Cambridge' s{ account of it before it came out ; how well he recollected all the * Dr. Stukeley, the well-known antiquary, was the Rector of St. George's, Queen Square, near the Museum. He died 17G5. See an account of him in Burke's Lauded Gentry, part viii. p. 025. f Life of Edward Earl of Clarendon, &c written by him- self, was printed in the year 1759, at the Oxford Press, in folio and 8vo. See Walpole's Letters, vol. iv. p. 10, and Johnson's Idler, No. lxv. J On Mr. Cambridge and his habits of conversation, see Walpole's Letters to Lady Ossory, vol. i. pp. 132, 140, 410; vol. ii. p. 242; Walpole to Mason, vol. i. p. 235; and Nichols's Literary Illustrations, vol. i. p. 130; and Rocking- ham Memoirs, vol. i. p. 215, for his Letter to Lord Hardwicke, in June, 17G5. In conversation he was said to be full of entertainment, liveliness, and anecdote. One sarcastic joke on Capability Brown testifies his wit, and his Scriblcriad still survives in the praises of Dr, Warton: yet the radical fault that pervades it, is well shown in Annual Review, ii. 584. THE POET GRAY. 185 faults, and howutterlyhe forgot all the beauties? Surely the grossest taste is better than such a sort of delicacy. The invasion goes on as quietly as if we be- lieved every Erenchman that set his foot on English ground would die on the spot, like a toad in Ireland ; nobody but I and Eobus are in a fright about it : by the way, he goes to church, not for the invasion, but ever since his sister Castlecorner* died, who was the last of the brood. Moralize upon the death of my Lady Essex, f and do write to me soon, for I am ever yours. At Mr. Jauncey's, Southampton-row, Blooms- bury. I have not a frank in the world, nor have I time to send to Mr. Eraser. * Sister of the Duke of Newcastle. See Walpole's Misc. Correspondence, ii. p 275 ; iii. 467 ; v. pp. 393, 403. Frances, 2nd daughter of LordPelham, married Christoper Wandesford, Viscount Castlecorner; she died in 1756. Walpole, in a MS. note of his, which I possess, says, " The Duke of Newcastle is afraid of spirits, and never durst lie in a room alone! This is literally true." f Lady Essex died in childbirth, July 19, 1759. She was daughter of Sir Charles Hanbury Williams, K.B. by Lady Frances, daughter of Thomas Earl Coningsby. See Walpole's Misc. Letters, vol. iii. pp. 67. He attributes her death, but wrongly, to another cause; see pp. 465-7. "The gay Lady Essex, Gray writes to Dr. WHiarton, died of a fever during her lying-in." Works, iii. 207. For her gaiety, see Walpole's Correspondence, vol. iii p. 272. 186 LETTERS OF LETTER XLVI. TO THE REV. JAMES BROWN. Dear Sir, Aug. 8, 1759. The season for triumph is at last come; I mean for our allies, for it will be long enough before we shall have reason to exult in any great actions of our own, and therefore, as usual, we are proud for our neighbours. Contades' great army is entirely defeated :* this (I am told) is undoubted, but no particulars are known as yet ; and almost as few of the other victory over the Russians, which is lost in the splendour of this greater action. So much for war ; and now come and see me in my peaceful new set- tlement, from whence I have the command of Highgate, Hampstead, Bedford Gardens, and the Museum ; this last (as you will imagine) is my favourite domain, where I often pass four hours in the day in the stillness and solitude of the reading room, which is uninterrupted by anything but Dr. Stukeley the antiquary, who comes there to talk nonsense and coffee-house news ; the rest of the learned are (I suppose) Jee Walpole's History of George the Second, vol. iii. p. 199, and Lacretelle, Histoire de France, vol. iii. p. 360, for au account of the various events and battles of these me- inorable campaigns. THE POET GRAY. 187 in the country, at least none of them come there, except tA\o Prussians, and a man who writes for Lord Royston.* When I call it peace- ful, you are to understand it only of us visitors, for the society itself, trustees and all, are up in arms, like the fellows of a college. The keepers have hroke off all intercourse with one another, and only lower a silent defiance as they pass by. Dr. Knight t has walled up the passage to the little house, because some of the rest were obliged to pass by one of his windows in the way to it. Moreover the trustees lay out £500 a-year more than their income ; so you may expect all the books and the crocodiles will soon be put up to auction ; the University (we hope) will buy. * Afterwards second Earl of Hardwick. It is probable that " the man ivho ivrites for Lord Royston" was collecting mate- rials for the State Papers, from 1750 to 1776, printed in 1778, 2 vols. 4to. On the connection of Lord Koyston with the spurious paper called " The English Mercurie, 1588," see the very curious and interesting account by Mr. Thomas "Watts, in Gent. Mag. May, 1850, p. 485, by whom the discovery of the forgery was first made. See his Letter to A. Panizzi, Esq. ib. Nov. 1839. f Doctor Gowin Knight, M.D. principal librarian of the British Museum from 1756 to 1772, when another M.D. Matthew Maty, became his successor. Doctor Fothergill once made this Doctor Knight a present of a thousand guineas. 188 LETTERS OF I have not (as you silently charge me) forgot Moslieim. I inquired long ago, and was told there were none in England, but Nourse expects a cargo every day, and as soon as it conies, you shall have it. Mason never writes, but I hear he is well, from Dr. Gisburne. Do not pout, but pray let me hear from you, and above all, do come and see me, for I assure you I am not uncomfortably situated for a lodger ; and what are we but lodgers ? Adieu, dear Sir, I am ever yours, T. G. AtMr.Jauncey's, Southampton-row, Bloonis- bury. LETTER XL VII. TO THE EEV. JAMES BROWN. Saturday, Aug. 9, 1759. I retract a part of my yesterday's intelli- gence, having to-day had an opportunity of hearing more, and from the best hand. The merit of Prince Ferdinand's policy and conduct is not a little abated by this account. He made a detachment of 4 or 5,000 men, under the hereditary Prince of Brunswick, which had got between the main Prench army THE POET GRAY. 189 and the town of Herwart, where their princi- pal magazine lay. The fear they were under on that account obliged Contades to begin the attack, and he accordingly began his march at midnight, in eight columns. Very early in the morning, before the Prince had time to make the proper dispositions, they were upon him. He had only his first line formed when the battle began, and of that line the English infantry made a considerable part ; Contades' troops (joined by the Duke of Broglio's corps) amount- ing to near four-score thousand : the Prince had only forty battalions with him, half of which only engaged (as I said) for want of time. The French artillery at first did terrible execution, and it was then our four regiments suffered so much, 68 of their officers (all, I think, below a captain in degree) being killed or wounded ; 267 private men killed, and above 900 wounded. The rest of the line were Hano- verians (who behaved very bravely), and, as their number was much greater, it is likely they suffered still more ; but of their loss I have no particular account. In the village of Tonhausen, near at hand, were all the Hes- sian artillery, which being now turned upon the French, soon silenced their cannon, and gave an opportunity to come to close engagement. The 190 LETTERS OF conflict after this lasted but an hour and a quarter. The French made a poor and shame- ful resistance, and were dispersed and routed on all sides. The Marshal himself (having detached a body of men to try if they could save or turn Herwart) retreated along the Weser toward Kintelen and Corvey, but wrote a letter to the Prince to say that, as Minden must now soon fall into the hands of his victo- rious troops, he doubted not but he would treat the wounded and sick (who were all lodged there) with his usual humanity. Ac- cordingly he entered Minden the next day. Eight thousand only of the French were slain in the field, twenty pieces of cannon (sixteen- pounders) taken, and twelve standards. The number of prisoners and the slaughter of the pursuit not so great as it might have been, for the English horse (though they received orders to move) stirred not a foot, nor had any share in the action. This is unaccountable, but true ; and we shall soon hear a greater noise about it. (Lord G. Sackville.y I ^ * See Cavendish's Debates, pp. 143, 171; Ellis's Letters on English History, 2nd series, iv. p. 413 ; Walpole to Mason, iii. p. 338, 371; Walpole's Hist, of George II., vol. iii. pp. 147, 192, 1%, 212, 271; Walpole's Letters to Lady Ossory, i. p. 214; Lord Mahohs History, vol. v. p. 429; Belsham's THE POET GRAY. 1<)1 The Prince of Brunswick fell in with the party sent towards Herwart, entirely routed it, took five pieces of cannon, the town, and all the magazines. The loss of the Russians is not what has been reported. Their march towards Silesia, how- ever, was stopped ; and the King of Prussia is gone in person to attack them. The story of Durell is all a lie.* Lord n.f is blamed for publishing General Yorke's and Mitchell's letters so hastily. Hist, of England, vol. iv. p. 399 ; Gray's Works, vol. iii. pp. 226, 238 ; Dr. Kings Memoirs of his own Time, p. 36. It is curious that Walpole in one place speaks of Lord G. Sack- ville as " of distinguished bravery ;" and indeed his conduct looks more like disaffection and discontent and pique than cowardice, and seems similar in motive to the conduct of Sir Hugh Palisser and Admiral Lestock in like circumstances. See Belsham's Hist. iv. 167. The chief witnesses against him were Colonel Sloper and Lord Ligonier. Add Life of Earl of Hardwicke, vol. iii. p. 186. " There came on Monday night the strangest letter from the Prince (Ferdinand) that I ever saw in my life, to press his (Lord G. S.'s) immediate recall; but these orders were gone six days before." See the Monthly Review, vol. xxi. for account of the innumerable pamphlets, in various forms, that appeared on this occasion, 1759. Also abridgment of the Avhole trial in Annual Register, 1760, p. 175. * In Jan. 1758, Commodore Durell hoisted his broad pendant on board the Diana. He went to command the fleet at Halifax. f Lord Holderncsse, one of the Secretaries of State, ap- 192 LETTERS OF Don't quote me for all this Gazette. The Prussians have had a very considerable advan- tage over General Harsch. LETTER XL VIII. TO THE REV. WM. MASON. Dear Mason, stoke, Oct. 6, 1759. If you have been happy where you are, or merely better in health for any of your employ- ments or idlenesses, you need no apologies with pointed June 21, 1751; in March, 1761, succeeded the Earl of Bute : see a letter of Joseph Yorke, in the London Gazette Extraordinary, Aug. 8, 1759. I do not see any letter of Mitchell's in the Gazettes for 1759 or 1760, or in the Annual Register of that time. The battle of Minden took place Aug. 1. 1759. See interesting account of Mr. Mitchell, our Minister at the Court of Berlin, afterwards Sir And. Mitchell, K.B., in Thiebault, Vie de Frederic, vol. iii. p. 284, &c. ; he died at Berlin of a dropsy, 1771, the consequence of a cold, and was succeeded by Mr. Elliott, Lord Minto's brother. His ready and caustic answer to Frederic will not be forgotten. The king was mentioning to him our losses at Port Mahon, and said we had made a bad campaign. Mitchell answered, " Avec l'aide de Dieu nous en ferons une plus heureuse." " Avec l'aide de Dieu ? Je ne vous connais pas cet allie la !" " C'est cependant, Sire, celui qui nous coute le moms." A selec- tion from his Letters has been recently published. THE POET GRAY. 193 me : my end is answered, and I am satisfied. One goes to school to the world some time before one learns precisely how long a visit ought to last. At this day I do not pretend to know it exactly, and verv often find out (when it is too late) that I have stayed half an hour too long. I shall not wonder, therefore, if your friend should make a mistake of half a year, if your occasions did not call you to town sooner. When you come I should hope you would stay the winter, but can advise nothing in a point where my own interest is so much concerned. Prav let me know of vour arrival immediately, that I may cut short my visita- tion here, or at least (if you are taken up always at Syon,* or Kensington) may meet you at Hounslow,f or at Billy Robinson's, J or some- * Syon, or Sion Hill, near Brentford, then the residence of Lord Holdernesse, since pulled down; Kensington, where Mason resided during the period of residence as chaplain to the king. See Walpole's Misc. Letters, iv. pp. 68, 150. t He may mean Mr. Walpole's residence, for in one of his letters Walpole says, " I live within two miles of Hounslow ;" vol. v. 135. And in another letter he says, " I expect Mr. Gray and Mr. Mason to pass the day with me." Long after this time there was only a ferry-boat between Twickenham and Richmond, and Walpole's usual road to London must have been through Isleworth and Brentford, by the Hounslow road. \ Billy Robinson was his friend the Rev. William Robinson, of Denton in Kent. Se^ account of him from the communi- O 194 LETTERS OF where. My only employment and amusement in town (where I have continued all the sum- mer, till Michaelmas) has heen the Museum ; but I have heen rather historically than poeti- cally given ; with a little of your encourage- ment, perhaps, I may return to my old Lydgate and Occleve,* whose works are there in abund- ance. I can write you no news from hence ; yet I have lately heard ill news, which I shall not write. Adieu, dear Mason, and believe me most faithfully yours. At the Lady Viscountess Cobham' s,t at Stoke House, near Windsor, Bucks. cation to me by Sir Egerton Brydges, in Appendix V. to Life of Gray, p. cii. I possess a list by Gray of the wild plants native to this district, made when on one of his two visits at Denton. On Gray's visit to him at Denton, see Miss Carter's Letters to Mrs. Montague, vol. i. p 384. An account of him may be seen also in Gent. Mag. 1803, and in Annual Register, 1803, p. 560; Censura Literaria, iii. p. 136. See his marriage, p. 212. He was the third surviving brother of Mrs. Montagu, and was of Westminster School, and St. John's College, Cambridge; Rector of Burfield, Bucks, where he died, aged 75, Dec. 1803. * See Gray's Observations on Lydgate's Poems, in Mathias's edition, p. 55 to p. 80; and in Ed. Aid. pp. 292 — 321. t Ann, widow of Field Marshal Richard Temple, Viscount Cobham, who died in 1749, daughter of Edmund Halsey, Esq. of South wark; she lived at the Old House at Stoke Park. Miss Speed resided with her, who afterwards became Countess of Yircy. Lady Cobham died in 1760. THE POET GRAY. 195 Yoiir friend Dr. Plumptre* lias lately sal for his picture to Wilson. The motto, in large letters (the measure of which he himself pre- served) is " Non magna loquimur, sed vivi- mus:" i.e. "We don't say much, but we hold good livings." LETTER XLIX. TO THE REV. JAMES BROWN. Dear Sir, 1759. You will receive to-morrow " Caractacus," piping hot, I hope, before anybody else has it. Observe, it is I that send it, for Mason makes no presents to any one whatever ; and, moreover, you are desired to lend it to nobody, that we may sell the more of them ; for money, not fame, is the declared purpose of all we do. I believe you will think it (as I do) greatly improved. The last chorus, and the lines that introduce it, are to me one of the best things I ever read, and * In 1760 Dr. Robert Plumptre was President of Queen's College, and from 1760 to 1788 Professor of Casuistry ; died in October, 1788. His " fjnnrl lirint/s" were Wimpole and Whadden, in Cambridgeshire; he was afterward Prebendary of Norwich. o 2 19C) LETTERS OF surely superior to anything he ever wrote. He has had infinite fits of affectation as the hour approached, and is now gone into the country for a week, like a new-married couple. I ani glad to find you are so lapt in music at Cambridge, and that Mingotti* is to crown the whole; I heard her within this fortnight, and think her voice (which always had a roughness) is considerably harsher than it was ; but yet she is a noble singer. I shall not partake of these delights, nor, I fear, be able to see Cambridge for some time yet ; but in a week I shall know better. Dr. Wharton, who desires his love to you, will, I believe, set out for Durham in about three weeks to settle at Old Park; at present his least girl is ill of the small pox, joined with a scarlet fever, but likely to get over it. Yesterday I and M. dined with Mr. Bonfoy, he told me that the old lady was eloped from Ripon, just at a time when he * Catarina Mingotti, born at Naples 1726, married Mingotti, a Venetian, Manager of the Opera at Dresden. Sang with great applause at the theatres in Italy, Germany, and Spain. She came to London in 1754, and made her first appearance in Ipermnestra in 1758. She quitted England in 1772, having still preserved her voice. The date of her death is not known. See Dr. Burney's History of Music, vol. iv. pp. 464-467; and see note, Letter xii. of this volume. THE POET GRAY. 197 seemed to want her there, and was, I thought, a little ruined at it ; but I (in my heart) com- mended her, and think her very well revenged upon him. Pray, make her my best compli- ments. Old Turner* is very declining, and I was sounded by Dr. about my designs (so I understood it). I assured him I should not ask for it, not choosing to be refused. He told me two people had applied already. N.B. All this is a secret. Adieu, dear Sir, Believe me ever sincerely yours, T. G. P.S. — The parcel will come by one of the flies. There is a copy for old Pa, who is out- rageous about it. I rejoice in Jack's good fortune. t Lord Strathmore is much out of order, but goes abroad. * Shallet Turner, D.C.L. of Peterhouse, Professor of Modern History, from 1735 to 1762. f Old Pa. is Rev. Mr. Palgrave. 198 LETTERS OF LETTER L. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. Dear Mason, Dec. 1, 1759. I am extremely obliged to you for the kind attention you bestow on me and my affairs. I have not been a sufferer bv this calamity ; it was on the other side of the street, and did not reach so far as the houses opposite to mine; but there was an attorney, who had writings belonging to me in his hands, that had his house burnt down among the first, yet he has had the good fortune to save all his papers. The fire is said to have begun in the chamber of that poor glass-organist who lodged at a coffee-house in S wit bin's Alley, and perished in the flames. Two other persons were destroyed (in the charitable office of assisting their friends) by the fall of some buildings. Last night there was another fire in Lincoln's Inn Fields, that burnt the Sardinian Ambassador's chapel and stables, with some adjacent houses. 'Tis strange that we all of us (here in town) lay ourselves down every night on our funereal pile, ready made, and compose ourselves to rest, while every drunken footman and drowsy old woman has a candle ready to light it before the morning. THE POET GRAY. ISM) You will have heard of Hawke's victory before this can reach you; perhaps by an express, Monsieur de Conflans' t o"\\ n ship of 74, were driven on shore, and two sunk (capital ships), with r it blew a storm during the whole could l)e saved out of them. Eight ng over their cannon were able to run mouth of a shallow river (where, if the wind will permit, it is probable they may be set on fire), and eight ran away, and are sup- posed to have got into Rochefort ; two of Hawke's fleet (of seventy and sixty guns) out of eagerness ran aground, and are lost, but most of the men preserved and brought off. There is an end of the invasion, unless you are afraid of Thurot, who is hovering off Scotland. It is an odd contemplation that somebody should have lived long enough to grow a great and glorious monarch. As to the nation, I fear it will not know how to behave itself, being just in the circumstances of a chambermaid that has got the 20,000/. prize in the lottery. You mistake me. I was always a friend to * Tom off, t On the battle between Conflans and Hawke, see Smollett's History of England, vol. iv. p. 459; Lacretelle, I list, de France, voL iii. p. 365. 200 LETTERS OF employment, and no foe to money; bnt they are no friends to each other. Promise me to be always busy, and I will allow you to be rich. I am, dear Mason, in all situations truly Yours. At Mr. Jauncey's, in Southampton Row. I received your letter Nov. 29, the day on which it is dated ; a wonderful instance of expedition in the post. LETTER LI. TO THE REV. JAMES BROWN. Dear Sir, April, 1760. I received the little letter, and the inclosed, which was a summons from the insurance office. On Tuesday last came a dispatch from Lisbon. It is probable you have had one from my lord;* but lest you should not I will * Lord Kinnoul. See Gray's letter to Dr. Wharton, Jan. 23, 1760, Works, vol. iii. p. 233. " Mr. Pitt, not the great, but the little one, my acquaintance, is set out on his travels. He goes with my Lord Kinnoul to Lisbon, &c." See also Walpole's Letters to Horace Maun, vol. iv. p. 24. Thomas, only THE POET GRAY. 201 tell you the chief contents of mine. Mr. Pitt says they were both dreadfully sick all the time they were beating about the Channel, but when they came to Plymouth (I find) my lord was so well, however, that he opened a ball in the dock-vard with the Master-attendant's daughter. They set sail from thence on the 28th, and crossed the bay with a very smooth sea, came in sight of Cape Finisterre in three days' time, and before night saw the rugged mountains of Galicia with great delight, and came near the coast of Portugal, opposite to Oporto; but (the wind changing in the night) they drove off to son of Thomas Pitt of Boconnock, Cornwall, eldest brother of William Pitt, afterwards Lord Camelford. A copy of Mr. Pitt's MS. Diary of his Travels in Spain and Portugal is in existence. Walpole's letter contains a highly favourable cha- racter of Mr. Pitt, in which Mr. Walpole introduces him to the favour of our ambassador at Florence. See Letter xxv.p. 104. Mr. Gough tells a friend " that he just had the perusal of a most delicious Tour which Thomas Pitt and Lord Strathmore made through Spain and Portugal in 1760, with most accurate descriptions," &c. — See Nichols's Anecdotes, vol. viii. p. 588. Lord Strathmore had joined the party. — See Gray's Letter, xciv. p. 234. Lord Kinnoul in 1759 was appointed ambassador at the court of Portugal, a mission rendered memorable by the hue — " Kinnoul's lewd cargo and Tyrawly's crew." See Rockingham Memoirs, vol. i. p. 146. Lord Camelford died in 1787, aged 77. 202 LETTERS OF the west, and were in a Avay to visit the Brazils. However, on the 7th of this month they entered the Tagus. He describes the rock of Lisbon as a most romantic and beautiful scene, and all the north bank of the river up to the city has (he says) every charm but verdure. The city itself too in that view is verv noble, and shows but little of the earthquake. This is all as yet. My lord is to write next packet. Lord G. S.* proceeds in his defence. People wonder at (and some there are that celebrate) his dexterity, his easy elocution, and unem- barrassed manner. He told General Cholmon- deley, one of his judges, who was asking a witness some question, that it was such a ques- tion as no gentleman, no man of honour, would put, and it was one of his misfortunes to have him among his judges ; upon which some per- sons behind him gave a loud clap ; but I do not find the court either committed or repri- manded them. Lord Albemarle only con- tented himself with saying he was sure that those men could be neither gentlemen nor men of honour. In the midst of this I do not hear any one point made out in his favour; and .... whose evidence bore the hardest upon * See on Lord George Sackville's trial, Gent. Mag. I7(i<». vol. xxx. p. 137, &c. THE POET GllAY. 203 him, and whom he had reflected upon with great warmth and very opprobrious terms, has offered the court (if they had any doubt of his veracity) to procure sixteen more witnesses who will say the same thing'. To be sure nothing in the field of Minden could be half so dreadful as this daily baiting he now is exposed to ; so (supposing him a coward) he has chosen very ill. I am not very sorry vour Venetians have abandoned you ; no more I believe are you. Mason is very well, sitting as usual for his picture, and while that is doing will not think of Yorkshire. We heard Delaval the other night play upon the water-glasses, and I was astonished. No instrument that I know has so celestial a tone. I thought it was a cherubim in a box. Adieu, dear sir : remember me to such as remember me ; particularly (whether she does or not) to Mrs. Bonfoy.* I suppose you know Dr. llossf has got the living of Frome from Lord Weymouth. f " Poor Mrs. Bonfoy," Gray writes to Dr. Wharton, " who taught me to pray, is dead; she struggled near a week, I fear in great torture, &c." See Works, vol. iv. p. 1 1. + Of St. John's College, Cambridge, D.D. in I7yf>; editor of Cicero's Epistolae Familiares, 2 vols. He was Chaplain to tk< 204 LETTERS OF LETTER LII. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. DEAR MASON, London, June 7, 1760. First and foremost pray take notice of the paper on which I am writing to you ; it is the first that ever was made of silk rags upon the encouragement given by your Society of Arts ; and (if this were all the fruits) I think you need not regret your two guineas a-year. The colour and texture you see ; and besides I am told it will not burn (at least will not flame) like ordinary paper, so that it may be of great King, and Preacher at the Rolls. Pie became Vicar of Frome, as mentioned, and made Bishop of Exeter in 1778, where he died, 1792. He was also author of a tract against Markland's Observations on Cicero's Epistles to Brutus, &c, and a friend of Conyers Middleton. Lord Hailes, in his Translation of Lactan- tius de Morb. Persecutorum, calls Dr. Ross "an excellent critic, to whom another age will do full credit," p. 156, 12mo. In my copy of Markland's Work, which belonged to Gray, he has written: " This book is answered in an ingenious way, but the irony not quite transparent." Ross's tract is entitled, " A Dissertation, in which the Defence of P. Sulla ascribed to M. T. Cicero is clearly jyroved to be spurious, after the manner of Mr. Mar/eland; with some remarks on the writings of the Ancients never before suspected." Gray is said to have given some assistance to Dr. Ross in this Answer. THE POET GHAY. 205 use for hanging rooms ; it is uncommonly tough, and, though very thin, you observe, is not transparent. Here is another sort of it, intended for the uses of drawing. You have lately had a visit where you are that I am sure bodes no good, especially just at the time that the Dean of Canterbury* and Mr. Blacowe died; we attribute it to a miff about the garter, and some other humps and grumps that he has received. Alas ! I fear it will never do. The Conde de Euentes was much at a loss, and had like to have made a quarrel of it, that he had nobody but the D. of N.f to introduce him ; but Miss Chudleigh :{: has appeased him with a ball. I have sent Musa3us to Mr. Eraser, scratched here and there ; and with it I desired him to inclose a bloody satire, § written against no less * Dr. Lynch, Dean of Canterbury from 1734 to May 25, 1760, when he died; succeeded, June 14, by Dr. William Friend, son of the. third master of Westminster School. The Rev. Richard Blacowe, Canon of Windsor, F.R.S. died on 13 May, 1760. t Duke of Newcastle. | Miss Chudleigh, afterwards the celebrated Duchess of Kingston. W^alpole says, Miss Chudleigh was received by all the Royal Family as Duchess, after having been publicly kept by the Duke as his mistress. See Mem. of George III. i. 354. § Alluding to two odes, to Obscurity and Oblivion, written by G Colman and R. Lloyd, which appeared in ridicule of 206 LETTERS OF persons than you and me by name. I con- cluded at first it was Mr. Pottinger, because he is your friend and my humble servant ; but then I thought he knew the world too well to call us the favourite minions of taste and of fashion, especially as to Odes, for to them his abuse is confined. So it is not Secretary Pottinger,* but Mr. Colnian, nephew to my Lady Bath, author of " The Connoisseur," a member of some of the inns of court, and a particular acquaintance of Mr. Garrick's. What have you done to him ? for I never heard his name before. He makes verv tolerable fun with me, where I understand him, which is not everywhere, but seems more angry with you. Lest people should not understand the humour of the thing (which indeed to do they must have our lyricisms at their fingers' ends), he writes letters in Lloyd's Evening Post to tell them who and what it was that he meant, and him and Mason. The Ode to Obscurity was chiefly directed against Gray, that to Oblivion against Mason. See Lloyd's Poems, vol. i. p. 120. Warburton, in a letter to Hurd (Let. cxli.), calls them " two miserable buffoon odes," and not without reason. Dr. J. Warton says, " The Odes of Gray were burlesqued by two men of wit and genius, who, however, once said to me that they repented of the attempt.'" They are reviewed in the Monthly Review, vol. xxiii. p. 57. * Mr. Richard Pottinger, Under-Secretary of State in 1754. THE POET GBAY. 207 says that it is like to produce a great combus- tion in the literary world; so if you have any mind to combustle about it well and good ; for me, I am neither so literary nor so combustible. I am going into Oxfordshire for a fortnight to a place near Henley,* and then to Cambridge, if that owl Fobusf does not hinder me, who talks of going to fizzle there at the com- mencement. What do you say to Lord Lyttelton, your old patron, and Mrs. Montagu, with their second- hand Dialogues of the Dead ? And then there * Park Place, near Henley, at that time the seat of General Conway and Lady Ailesbury. See Gray's Letters, vol. iv. pp. 221, 247. Horace Walpole to Lady Ossory, ii. p. 338, and to Horace Mann, vol. iv. pp 221,247. " My Lady Ailesbury has been much diverted, and so will you too Gray is in this neigh- bourhood. Lady Carlisle says, ' He is extremely like me in his manner.' They went as a party to dine on a cold loaf, and passed the day. Lady A. protests he never opened his lips but once, and then only said, " Yes, my lady, I believe so." — See Walpole' s Letter to G Montagu, p 199. f Lord Holland in a few words drew the character of the Duke of Newcastle {the oval Fobus) a little before the latter's death, and not long before his own. " His Grace had no friends, and deserved none. He had no rancour, no ill nature, which I think much to his honour; but, though a very good quality, it is only a negative one, and he had absolutely no one portion good, either of his heart or head." See Selwyn Correspondence, ii. 209. 208 LETTERS OF is your friend the little black man ; * he has * This supplemental dialogue, as Gray calls it, is " An addi- tional Dialogue of the Dead between Pericles and Aristides, being a sequel to the Dialogue between Pericles and Cicero." Who the " little black man" is who wrote it, is not mentioned in Mr. Phillimore's Life of Lord Lyttelton. See vol. ii. 352. And Shenstone says in a letter (July 7, 1760), " Lord Lyttelton is allowedly the author of these dialogues — whose the very last is, I do not know? The author, however, thus alluded to was Doctor /. Brown, the author of The Estimate, which I first learned from the following passage in the Critical Review, vol. ix. p. 465 : " The masterly dialogues could not have been continued with more propriety than by a writer ivhose ivories have been purchased with astonishing avidity, for their elegance of diction and sprightliness of sentiment. When such a triumvirate club their wits for the public entertainment, the endeavour cannot fail," &c. (i. e. Lord Lyttelton, Mrs. Montagu, and Dr. Brown). Again the reviewer says, — " Pericles and Aristides are not only diversified in thought and sentiment, but a third person is seen peeping behind the scene, namely, the all- sufficient and all-approving Estimator" &c. The Monthly Reviewer also, vol. xxiii. p 22, identifies the author, as " one who has somehow stolen into such reputation in the literary world, that inconsiderate readers are inclined to give him credit for his matter, on account of his elegant manner of expression. We therefore thought ourselves obliged to enter into particulars in order to vindicate our judgment of this fantastical composi- tion." Horace Walpole, however, mentions the author's name in a letter to Sir D. Dalrymple. " Dr. Brown has written a dull dialogue called Pericles and Aristides, which will have a dif- ferent effect from that yours would have." See Misc. Letters, iv. p. 64. THE POET GRAY. 209 written one supplemental dialogue, but I did not read it.* Do tell me of your health, your doings, your designs, and your golden dreams, and try to love me a little better in Yorkshire than you did in Middlesex, For I am ever yours, T. G-. LETTER Lm. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. DEAR OLD SOUL, London, June 27, 17G0. I cannot figure to myself what you should mean by my old papers. I sent none ; all I can make out is this — when I sent the Musseus and the Satire home to Mr. Eraser, my boy carried back the Conway Papersf to a house in your street,! as I remember they were divided into three parcels, on the least of which I had written the word "nothing," or "of no consequence." It did not consist of above twenty letters at * See Preface to Dialogues. f See Gray's Letter to Dr. Wharton, Sept. 18, 1759, vol. iii. p. 223. " When I come home I have a great heap of the Conway Papers (which is a secret) to read and make out." See Walpole's Letters, vol. iii. p. 401 ; Gray's Works, vol. iii. p. 587, " I am still in the height of my impatience for the chest of old papers from Ragley, Lord Hertford's seat ;" and to tho Rev. H. Zouch, vol. iii. p. 401, with note c. \ To Horace Walpole's house in Arlington Street. P 210 LETTERS OF most ; and if you find anything about Mr. Bourne's affairs, or stewards' and servants' let- ters and bills, it is certainly so. This was car- ried to Mr. Fraser by mistake, and sent to Aston ; and if this is the case, they may as well be burnt ; but if there is a good number, and about affairs of State (which you may smell out), then it is one of the other parcels, and I am distressed, and must find some method of getting it up again. I think I had inscribed the two packets that signified anything, one, " Papers of Queen Elizabeth or earlier," the other, which was a great bundle, " Papers of King James and Charles the First." Pray Heaven it is neither of these ; therefore do not be precipitate in burning. I do not like your improvements at Aston, it looks so like settling ; * if I come I will set * Mason pulled down the old rectory and built another very commodious house, changing the site, so as from his windows to command a beautiful and extensive prospect, bounded by the Derbyshire hills. He also much enlarged and improved the garden, planting a small group of tulip-trees at the further end, near the summer-house dedicated to Gray. In another site, opposite the front door, and seen between some clumps, is a terminus, with the head of Milton: on the landing of the staircase, a copy of the Bocca Padugli eagle from Strawberry Hill. Since Mason's time the country round Aston has been much more exposed by the woods being cut down, and the beauty of the views from his place in that respect injured. THE POET GRAY. 211 fire to it. Your policy and your gratitude I approve, and your determination never to quar- rel and ever to pray ; but I, that believe it want of power, am certainly civiller to a cer- tain person than you, that call it want of exertion. I will never believe they are dead, though I smelt them ; that sort of people always live to a good old age. I dare swear they are only gone to Ireland, and we shall soon hear they are bishops. The bells are ringing, the squibs bouncing, the siege of Quebec is raised.* S wanton got up the river when they were bombarding the town. Murray made a sally and routed them, and took all their baggage. This is the sum and substance in the vulgar tongue, for I cannot get the Gazette till midnight. Perhaps you have had an estafette, since I find their cannon are all taken; and that two days after a French fleet, going to their assistance, was intercepted and sunk or burnt. To-morrow I go into Oxfordshire, and a fort- night hence, when old Fobus's owl's nestf is a little aired, I go into it. Adieu ; am ever and ever, T. G. * See Smollett's History of England, vol. v. p. 214. Rock, iii. cxxviii. 1760. "J" When the University, after the Commemoration has passed, p 2 212 LETTERS OE LETTER L1V. TO THE REV. JAMES BROWN. Dear Sir, July, 1760. I guess what the packet is, and desire you would keep it, for I am come back hither, and hope to be with you on Tuesday night. I shall trouble you to have my bed aired, and to speak about a lodging for my servant ; though (if it be not contrary to the etiquette of the college) I should rather hope there might be some garret vacant this summer time, and that he might lie within your walls ; but this I leave to your consideration. This very night Billy Robinson* consummates his good fortune ; she has 10,000/. in her pocket, and a brother unmarried with at least as much more. He is infirm, and the first convoy that sails they all three set out together for Naples to pass a year or two. I insist upon it he owes all this to Mr. Talbot in the first place, and in the second to me, and have insisted on a couple of thousand pounds between us — the least penny — or he is a shabby fellow. is again quiet, which Gray calls the "nest" of the Chancellor the Duke of Newcastle. * See p. 193. TJIE POET GRAY. 213 I ask pardon about Madame de Euentes* and her twelve ladies. I heard it in good com- pany, when first she arrived, piping hot; and I suppose it was rather what people appre- hended than what they experienced. She surely brought them over, but I do not find she has carried them about; on the contrary, she calls on my Lady Hervey f in a morning * The wife of the Spanish Ambassador. See account of her in Belsham's History, vol. v. p. 54 ; Glover's Memoirs, p. 1G4; Adolphus's History, i. p. 5G; Kockingham Papers, i. p. 58 ; Horace Walpole to Mann, vol. i. pp. 59, 187 ; History of George III. vol. i. p. 127; hi. 253. Walpole, in a letter to the Earl of Strafford, gives portraits of her, her husband, and family. See Misc. Lett. iv. p. GO. " Mons. de Fuentes is a halfpenny print of my Lord Huntingdon. His wife homely, but good-natured and civil. The son does not degenerate from such high-born ugliness ; the daughter-in-law was sick, and they say is not ugly, and has as good a set of teeth as one can have when one has but two, and those black. They seem to have no curiosity, sit where they are placed, and ask no questions. She speaks bad French, danced a bad minuet, and went away, though there was a miraculous draft of fishes for the supper, as it was a feast," &c. f The Mary Lepell of Pope, and to whom Voltaire addressed some English verses; born 1700; married John Lord Hervey 1720; died in 1768, aged G7; lived on terms of friendship with Horace Walpole, who, in his Memoirs of George HI. vol. ii. p. 108, calls her letters an excellent authority. Arch- deacon Nares speaks of her as " that very superior woman, Lady Hervey." See on her GibbonsMisc. Works, i. p. 81, and 214 LETTERS OF in an undress, and desires to be without cere- mony; and the whole tribe, except Madame de Mora (the young countess), were at Miss Chudleigh's* ball and many other places : but of late Dr. Alrenf (whom nobody ever liked) has advised them to be disagreeable, and they accept of no invitations. Adieu, dear sir; I hope so soon to be with you, that I may spare you the trouble of reading any more. I am ever yours, T. G. I hear there was a quarrel at the Commons, between Dr. Barnard J and Dr. Ogden — mackerel or turbot. M^moires sur Rousseau, vol. i. p. 122 ; and Selwyn Correspond- ence, vol. ii. pp. 212, 332 — 336. There is an original portrait of her at Lord Bristol's, at Ickworth, and I possess a beautiful pencil drawing of her by Richardson. An edition of her Letters to Mr. Morris was published by Mr. Croker in 1821. * On Miss Chudleigh, Maid of Honour to the Princess Dowager of Wales, afterwards Duchess of Kingston, see Walpole's Misc. Letters, iv. pp. 37 and 473. She was sup- posed to have been previously married to Augustus Earl of Bristol; and in vol. v. pp. 214, 229, and 447, where all the acts of the historic drama are contained. There is an engraving of her from a picture by Reynolds in the third volume of Walpole's Letters to Mann. See also Jesse's George Selwyn, vol. iv. p. 89. f Probably the Catholic priest attending on the family. \ Edward Barnard, D.D. the well-known learned and ac- THE POET GRAY. 215 LETTER LV. TO THE REV. JAMES BROWN. DEAR SlR, Saturday, August, 1760. This is to inform you that I hope to see you on Monday night at Cambridge. If Fobus will come, I cannot help it. I must go and see somebody during that week — no matter where. Pray let Bleek make an universal rummage of cobwebs, and massacre all spiders, old and young, that live behind window- shutters and books. As to airing, I hear Dick Forrester has done it. Mason is at Prior Park, so I can say nothing of him. The stocks fell, I believe, in consequence of your prayers, for there was no other reason. Adieu. I am ever yours, T. G. complislied Master of Eton, and afterwards Provost, Canon of Windsor on Richard Blacowe's decease. See Gent. Mag. 17G0, p. 298, and an account of him in Nichols's Anecdotes, vol. v. p. 445; also a very interesting memorial of him is given by his friend Jacob Bryant in the eighth volume of Nichols's Anecdotes, pp. 543 — 549. His Latin epitaph, in Eton College Chapel, was written by Mr. Bryant. He is mentioned in the Walpole and Mason Correspondence, vol. i. p. 128, as not approving publishing the fragment left by Gray, and printed by Mason under the name of " Ode to Vicissitude ;" and see Johnaoniana, p. 195, for his well-known lines, " I lately thought no man alive," &c. ; also pp. 8, 43. 216 LETTERS OF LETTER LVI. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. DEAR MASON, Aug. 7, 1760, Pembroke Hall Your packet, being directed to me here, lay some days in expectation of my arrival (for I did not come till about ten days since) ; so, if the letter inclosed to Dr. Zachary Howlet* were not delivered so soon as it ought to have been, you must not lay the fault to my charge. It is a great misfortune that I dare not pre- sent your new seal to the senate in congre- gation assembled, as I long to do. Not only the likeness, but the character of the fowl is so strongly marked, that I should wish it were executed in marble, by way of bas-relief, on the pedestal of George the Second, which his Grace proposes soon to erect in the Theatre. Mr. Brown and I think we discover beauties which perhaps the designer never intended. There is a brave little mitred Madge already on the wing, who is flying, as it were, in the face of his parent ; this, we say, is Bishop K. :f then there is a second, with ingratitude in its face, * Dr. Zachary Grey is meant. f Bishops Edmund Keene and Philip Yonge are meant. On the former see Grenville Papers, vol. ii. p. 534; Walpole's Misc. Letters, ii. pp. 362, 459 ; vol.iv.p.58; v. 294; vi.p.5; THE POET GRAY. 217 though not in its attitude, that will do the same as soon as it is fledged and has the cou- rage ; this is Bishop Y. : a third, that looks mighty modest, and has two little ears sprout- ing, but no mitre yet, we take for Dean G. :* the rest are embryos that have nothing dis- tinguishing, and only sit and pull for a bit of mouse; they won't be prebends these five days, grace of God, and if the nest is not taken first. Your friend Dr. Ch.f died of a looseness : about a week before, he eat five large mackerel, full of roe, to his own share; but what gave the finisliing stroke was a turbot, on Trinity Sunday, of which he left but very little for the company. Of the mackerel I have eyewitnesses, so the turbot may well find credit. He has left, I am told, 15,000^. behind him. and Gray's Letters, vol. iv. p. 49 ; and Notes to Gray and Nicholls Correspondence, p. 185. See also Nichols's Anecdotes, ii. p. 66 ; iv. 332, 351, 721 ; viii. p. 141 ; also Illustr. iii. 529. Bishop Newton, in his Autobiography, gives a more favourable picture of Dr. Keene (see p. 114); particularly for taste and magnificence; but Walpole calls him " that interested hog, the Bishop of Chester;" and in his Letters to Mason, vol. i. p. 61, " Did not Mansfield and Stone beget the Bishop of Chester ?" * I presume Dr. John Greene, Dean of Lincoln. t Dr. Chapman. See Gray's letter to Dr. Clarke. Works, vol. iii. p. 253. 218 LETTERS OF The Erse Fragments* have been published five weeks ago in Scotland, though I had them not (by a mistake) till last week. As you tell me new things do not soon reach you at Aston, I inclose what I can; the rest shall follow when you tell me whether you have not got it already. I send the two which I had before, for Mr. Wood, because he has not the affecta- tion of not admiring. I continue to think them genuine, though my reasons for believing the contrary are rather stronger than ever : but I will have them antique, for I never knew a Scotchman of my own time that could read, much less write, poetry ; and such poetry too ! I have one (from Mr. Macpherson) which he has not printed: it is mere description, but excellent, too, in its kind. If you are good, and will learn to admire, I will transcribe it. Pray send to Sheffield for the last Monthly Review : there is a deal of stuff about us and * See Annual Register, 1760, where they are reviewed, and Monthly Review, vol xxiii. p. 205. Walpole's Misc. Letters, iv. p. 38. " Mt. Gray, who is an enthusiast about these poems, begs me to put the following queries to you," &c. " He, Mr. Mason, Lord Lyttelton, and one or two more whose taste the world allows, are in love with your Erse Elegies. I cannot say in general that they are so much admired, but Mr. ( Iray alone is worth satisfying." To Sir D. Dalrymple. See also ( rray's Letter to Dr. Wharton, Works, vol. iii. pp. 249, 257. THE POET GRAY. 219 Mr. Colman.* It says one of us, at least, has always borne his faculties meekly. I leave you to guess which that is : I think I know. You oaf, you must be meek, must you? and see what you get by it ! I thank you for your care of the old papers : they were entirely insignificant, as you sus- pected. Billy Robinson has been married near a fortnight to a Miss Richardson (of his own age, he says, and not handsome), with 10,000Z. in her pocket; she lived with an (unmarried) infirm brother, who (the first convoy that sails) sets out with the bride and bridegroom in his company for Naples ; you see it is better to be curate of Kensington than rector of Aston. Lord J. C.f called upon me here the other day ; young Ponsonby, J his nephew, is to come * See Monthly Review, July, 1760, p. 57 to p. 63, art. Two Odes, 4to. Is. Payne. It is not without some surprise that I read in Hawkins's Life of Johnson, the latter asserting — " Colman never produced a luckier thing than his first ode in imitation of Gray ; a considerable part of it may be numbered among those felicities which no man has twice attained." See Gray's Letter to Dr. "Wharton on these odes, Works, vol. iii. p. 250. f Lord John Cavendish. J One of the four sons of William second Lord Ponsonby and Earl of Besborongh, who all died young. He married 220 LETTERS OF this year to the University; and, as his Lord- ship (very justly) thinks that almost everything depends on the choice of a private tutor, he desires me to look out for such a thing, but without engaging him to anything. Now I am extremely unacquainted with the younger part of Cambridge, and consequently can only in- quire of other people, and (what is worse) have nobody now here whose judgment I could much rely on. In my own conscience I know no one I should sooner recommend than Onley, and besides (I own) should wish to bring him to this college ; yet I have scruples, first because I am afraid Onley should not answer my lord's expectations (for what he is by way of a scholar I cannot tell), and next because the young man (who is high-spirited and unruly) may chance to be more than a match for Mr. B., # with whom the authority must be lodged. I have said I would inquire, and mean (if I could) to do so without partiality to any college : but believe, after all, I shall find no better. Now I per- ceive you have said something to Lord J.f al- ready to the same purpose, therefore tell me what I shall do in this case. If you chance to Lady Caroline Cavendish 1739, eldest daughter of William Duke of Devonshire, who died this year, 1760. * Mr. Brown. f Lord John Cavendish. THE POET GRAY. 221 see his lordship you need not mention it, unless he tell you himself what lias passed between us. Adieu, dear Mason, I am ever yours. A Note. — Having made many inquiries about the authenticity of these Fragments,* I have got a letter from Mr. David Hume, the his- torian, which is more satisfactory than any- thing I have yet met with on that subject : he says,— " Certain it is that these poems are in every body's mouth in the Highlands — have been handed down from father to son— and are of an age beyond all memory and tradition. Adam Smith, the celebrated Professor in Glasgow, told me that the piper of the Argyleshire militia repeated to him all those which Mr. Macpher- son has translated, and many more of equal beauty. Major Mackay (Lord Itae's brother) told me that he remembers them perfectly well; as likewise did the Laird of Macfarline (the greatest antiquarian we have in this country), and who insists strongly on the his- torical truth, as well as the poetical beauty, of * See Gray's Works, ed. Aid. vol. iii. pp. 244, 249, 256. 1 lume's letter is printed entire in European Magazine, vol. v. p. 327, March 1784; and see Mason's note on the subject; and Walpole's Misc. Letters, vol. iv. pp. 22, 37, 55. 222 LETTERS OF these productions. I could add the Laird and Lady Macleod, with many more that live in different parts of the Highlands, very remote from each other, and could only be acquainted with what had become (in a manner) national works. There is a country- surgeon in Locha- ber, who has by heart the entire epic poem mentioned by Mr. Macpherson in his Preface, and, as he is old, is perhaps the only person living that knows it all, and has never com- mitted it to writing. We are in the more haste to recover a monument which will certainly be regarded as a curiosity in the republic of letters. We have therefore set about a subscription of a guinea or two guineas a-piece in order to enable Mr. Macpherson to undertake a mission into the Highlands to recover this poem and other fragments of antiquity." I forgot to mention to you that the names of Pingal, Ossian, Oscar, &c, are still given in the Highlands to large mastiffs, as we give to ours the names of Caesar, Pompey, Hector, &c* * Sir Egertou Brydes says, " Gray was cold and fastidious ; but, when his enthusiasm could indulge itself with confidence, he delighted to nurse those visionary propensities; witness the ardour with which he encouraged himself in the belief of Ossian," &c. — See Gnomica, p. 225. THE POET GRAY. 223 LETTER LVII. TO THE REV. JAMES BROWN. DEAR SIR, South". Row, Oct. 23, 1760. I am obliged to you for your letter, and the bills inclosed, which I shall take the first opportunity I have to satisfy. I imagine by this then Lord John is or has been with you to settle matters. Mr. Onley* (from whom I have twice heard) consents, though with great diffidence of himself, to undertake this task ; but cannot well be there himself till about the 13th of November. I would gladly hear what your first impressions are of the young man, for (I must tell you plainly) our Mason, who had seen him at Chats- worth, was not greatly edified ; but he hopes the best. To-morrow Dr. Gisborne f and I go * Charles Onley, elected a fellow of Pembroke College in 1756, and vacated in 1763. He took the degree of Twelfth Wrangler in 1755. f Dr. Tlwmas Gisborne, in 1759, was elected a Fellow and Censor of the College of Physicians; he is also designated Med. Reg. ad Familiam. In 1791 he was President of the College, again in 1794, in 1796, and every succeeding year till 1803, inclusive: his name does not appear after 1805. He had been Fellow of St. John's College, Cambridge. Dr. Gisborne was known to the present learned President of the College of Physicians, who remembers having met him at the dinner table of Sir Isaac Pennington, at Cambridge. He was rather short and corpulent. When the Government of the 224 LETTERS OF to dine with that reverend gentleman (Mason) at Kensington during his waiting. He makes many kind inquiries after you, but I see very little of him, he is so taken up with the beaux- arts. He has lately etched my head with his own hand; and his friend Mr. Sandbv,* the landscape painter, is doing a great picture with a view of M. Snowdon, the Bard, Edward the First, &c. Now all this I take for a bribe, a sort of hush-money to me, who caught him last year sitting for his own picture, and know that at this time there is another painter doing one of the scenes in Elfrida. day agreed to purchase John Hunter's Museum, the offer of being the Conservator of the Collection was made to the College of Physicians, through Dr. Gisborne, then President of the College. He put the letter in his pocket, forgot it, and the offer was never brought before the consideration of the College. The Government subsequently made an offer of it to the College of Surgeons, and it now forms the chief part of their valuable Museum in Lincoln's Inn Fields. It was said that the College of Physicians declined to receive this collection, a»d this has been constantly repeated. For this curious anecdote, I am indebted to the kindness of the present learned Pre- sident, Dr. Ayrton Paris. Dr. Gisborne was called in to attend Gray in his last illness. He died Feb. 24, 1806. See Gent. Mag. 180G, p. 287. * Mr. Sandby, the father of the unrivalled English school of water-colours. Many of the finest and earliest specimens of his pencil which exist, and which I have seen, are still in the possession of his family. TILE POET GRAY. 22-") In my way to town I met with the first news of the expedition from Sir William Williams, who makes a part of it, and perhaps may lay his fine Vandyck head in the dust.* They talk, some of Hoehefort, some of Brest, and others of Calais. It is sure the preparations are great, hut the wind hlows violently. Here is a second edition of the Fragments, with a new and fine one added to them. You will perhaps soon see a very serious Elegy (but this is a secret) on the death of my Lady Coventry, t Watch for it. If I had been aware Mr. Mapletoft $ w^as in town I should have returned him the two guineas I have of his. Neither Oshorn nor Bathurst know when the book will come out. I will therefore pay it to any one he pleases. Adieu, dear sir, I am ever yours, T. G. * Sir William Peers Williams, C.B. a Captain in Burgoyne's Dragoons. See account of him in Gray's Works, ed. Aid. vol. i. p. 93, and note at Letter lxix. " Sir W. Williams, a young man much talked of for his exceeding ambition, enter- prising spirit, and some parts in Parliament, is already fallen there; and even he was too great a prize for such a paltry island." — W r alpole's Letter to H. Mann, i. p. 29. f See Masons Works, vol. i. p. 107. J Probably John Mapletoft, of Pembroke College, AM. 1764, took a W r rangler's degree in 1752; one below that of (Bishop) Porteus. 226 LETTERS OF I did not mean to carry away your paper of the two pictures at Were Park ; * but I find I have got it here. LETTER LVIII. TO THE REV. JAMES BROWN. Dear Sir, Oct. 25, 1760. You will wonder at another letter so soon ; it is only to tell you what you will probably hear before this letter reaches vou. The King is dead.f He rose this morning about six (his usual early hour) in perfect health, and had his chocolate between seven and eight. An unaccountable noise was heard in his chamber ; they ran in, and foimd him lying on the floor. He was directly bled, and a few drops came from Mm, but he instantly expired. This event happens at an unlucky time, but (I should think) will make little alteration in public measures. I am rather glad of the alteration with re- * Ware Park, near Hertford. f On the death of George the Second, see Smollett's History, vol. v. c. xiv. p. 287. Belsham"s History, vol. iv. p. 442. THE POET GRAY. 227 gard to Chambers, for a reason which you will guess at. My service to Pa.* I will write to him soon, and long to see his manuscripts, and blue books, and precipices. Adieu. I am yours, T. G. LETTER LIX. TO THE REV. JAMES BROWN. DEAR SlR, London, Nov. 8, 1760. You will excuse me if I write you a little news in this busy time, though I have nothing else to write. The ladies are rejoiced to hear they may probably have a marriage before the coronation, which will restore to that pomp all the beauties it would otherwise have lost. I hear (but this is sub sigillo) no very extraor- dinary account of the Princess of Saxe Gotha. Mason walks in the same procession, and, as you possibly may see liim the next day, he will give you the best account of it. You have * Rev. William Palgrave; in allusion to the manuscript Diaries kept during his Travels. He died in 1799. Gent. Mag. 1799, pp. 1003, 1085. See Letter xxxvu. p. 158. Q 2 228 LETTERS OF heard, I suppose, that there are two wills (not duplicates). He had given to the Duke of Cumberland all his jewels, but at the last going to Hanover had taken with him all the best of them, and made them crown iewels, so that they come to the successor. He had also given the Duke three millions of rix- dollars in money ; but in the last will (made since the affair at Closter Seven), after an apology to him, as the best son that ever lived, and one that has never offended him, declares that the expenses of the war have consumed all this money. He gives him (and had before done so by a deed of gift) all his mortgages in Germany, valued at 170,000£. ; but the French are in possession of part of these lands, and the rest are devoured by the war. He gives to Princesses Emily and Mary about 37,000/. between them, the survivor to take the whole. I have heard that the Duke was to have a third of this, but has given up his share to his sisters. To Lady Yarmouth a box, which is said to have in it 10,000Z. in notes. The K. is residuary legatee ; what that amounts to no one will know, and consequently it must remain a doubt whether he died rich or poor. I incline to believe rather the latter ; I mean in comparison of what was expected. THE POET GRAY. 229 The Bishop* is the most assiduous of courtiers, standing for ever upright in the midst of a thousand ladies. The other day he trod on the toes of the Duke, who turned to him (for he made no sort of excuse), and said aloud, " If your Grace is so eager to make your court, that is the way" (pointing towards the king) ; and then to the Count de Fuentes, " You see priests are the same in this country as in yours." Mr. E. Pinch (your representative) has got the place that Sir H. E. (my friend) had — sur- veyor, I think, of the roads, which is about 6Q0L a-year.f What then (you will ask) has * The name of the bishop is erased in the MS., but Seeker is meant. See Walpole's History of George III., vol. i. p. 19. " Seeker, the archbishop, who for the first days of the reign flattered himself Avith the idea of being First Minister in a court that hoisted the standard of religion. He was unwearied in at- tendance at St. James's, and in presenting bodies of clergy ; and his assiduity was so bustling and assuring, that, having pushed aside the Duke of Cumberland to (jet at the king, his royal high- ness reprimanded him with a bitter taunt." See, however, a more just and candid account of Seeker in the. Editors note to these Memoirs, vol. iii. p. 233. Walpole's notices of Seeker in MS., which I have, are still more flagrantly unjust, and untrue. f Mr. Henry Finch was Member for Cambridge, and his predecessor as surveyor of the kings roads was Sir Henry Erskiue. It was Sir Henry Erskine who made the unsuc- cessful application to Lord Bute for the place of Professor of Modern Languages in favour of Gray, in 1762. See Letters, 230 LETTERS OF become of niy friend? Oh, he is a vast fa- vourite, is restored to his regiment, and made Groom of the Bedchamber. I have not been to see him yet, and am half afraid, for I hear he has a levee. Pray don't tell. Lord J. C. is fixed to come at his time in spite of the world. I hear within the year yon may expect a visit from his Majesty in person. ***** When the Duke of Devonshire introduced my lord mayor, he desired his grace would be so kind to tell him which was my Lord Boot. This must not be told at all, nor anything else as from me. Adieu. LETTER LX. THE REV. WILLIAM MASON TO GRAY. DEAR Mr. GRAY, Aston, Nov. 28, '60. I send you the Elegy ; you will find I have altered all the things you marked, and some vol. iii. p. 301, and Mason's note. Sir H. E. was M.P. for Trail, and Lieut.-Col. in the army. See a letter from him to Mr. Grenville in Grenville Papers, i. p. 189. He is called by Walpole " a creature of the favorite (Bute)." See Memoirs of George III., i. p. 139. In 17G0 (the date of the letter) he was Major-General, and Colonel of the G7th Regt. vice Lord Frederick Campbell. THE POET GRAY. 231 perhaps I have improved. Mr. Wood thinks the conclusion equal enough to the rest, there- fore I have ventured to send a copy to Lord Holdernesse ; hut I hope to have your scratches upon that part also soon. I wish you would let your servant take a copy and send it to Mr. Brown, to whom I talked ahout it. When I was at Cambridge I saw a great deal of Onley, and am very sanguine in my hopes that his pupilage will not turn out ill. Dr. Acton* came down when I was there, and entertained us much with his beaver and camhlet surtout. Do write to me soon, and promise yourself that I will be as regular a correspondent for the future as I have always been. Your sincere friend, W. Mason. * Nathaniel Acton was admitted a Fellow Commoner of Pembroke in 1743; lie might be revisiting his old College; and a Thomas Acton was elected Fellow in 1756, who vacated in 1763. 232 LETTERS OF LETTER LXI. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. Loudon, at Mr. Jauneey's, not Jenour's, Dear Mason, Dec. 10, 1760. It is not good to give copies of a thing before you have given it the last hand.* If you would send it to Lord H.f you might have spared that to Lady M. C. J ; they have both showed it to particular friends, and so it is half published before it is finished. I begin again from the beginning : — "Ah, mark," is rather languid; I would read " Heard ye." V. 3. I read, " and now with rising knell," to avoid two " the's." * The Elegy on Lady Coventry. f Lord Holdemesse. J Lady Mary Coke, fourth daughter of John Duke of Argyll, married Edward Viscount Coke, 1747, heir apparent of Thomas Earl of Leicester, who died in his father's lifetime. Walpole writes, " I have regard and esteem for her good qualities, which are many, but I doubt her genius will never suffer her to be quite happy," &c. She lived at Notting Hill, and died at a great age in 1811. A fuller character of her is given in a letter to Horace Mann, ii. p. 257. See his verses on her in Misc. Letters, iv. 199; and v. p. 353. Add Selwyn ( lorres. vol. i. p. 32(>. THE POET GRAY. 233 V. 10. I read, " since now that bloom," &c. V. 11, 12, are altered for the better, and so are the following-; but for "liquid lightning," Lord J. Cavendish says, there is a dram which goes by that name ; and T. G. adds, that the words are stolen from a sonnet of the late Prince of "Wales.* What if we read " liquid radiance," and change the word " radiant" soon after. V. 18. Head, " that o'er her form," &c. V. 23. " Cease, cease, luxuriant muse." Though mended, it is still weakly. I do not much care for any muse at all here. * Gray alludes to the song written by Frederick Prince of Wales, called " The Charms of Sylvia," of which I give the two commencing stanzas. The expression alluded to is in the first line: — " 'Tis not the liquid brightness of those eyes, That swim with pleasure and delight; Nor those heavenly arches which arise O'er each of them to shade the light. " 'Tis not that hair which plays with every wind, And loves to wanton round thy face; Now straying round thy forehead, now behind, Rocking with unresisting grace." The whole may be seen in Mr. Jesse's Memoirs of the Court df England, vol. iii. p. 151. 234 LETTERS OF V. 26. " Mould'ring " is better than " clay- cold;" somewhat else might be better perhaps than either. V. 35. " Whirl yon in her wild career." This image does not come in so well here between two real happinesses. The word " lead " before it, as there is no epithet left to " pnrple," is a little faint. " Of her choicest stores an ampler share," seems to me prosaic. " Zenith-height" is harsh to the ear and too scientific. I take it the interrogation point comes after "fresh delight;" and there the sense ends. If so, the question is too long in asking, and leaves a sort of obscurity. V. 46. I understand, but cannot read, this line. Does "tho' soon" belong to "lead her hence," or to " the steps were slow ?" I take it to the latter ; and if so, it is hardly gram- mar; if to the former, the end of the line appears very naked without it. V. 55. " R,ouse, then — his voice pursue." I do not like this broken line. V. 74. "Firm as the sons," that is, "as firmly as." The adjective used for the adverb here gives it some obscurity, and has the ap- pearance of a contradiction. THE POET GRAY. 235 V. 76. A less metaphorical line would be- come this place better. V. 80. This, though a good line, would be better too if it were more simple, for the same figure is amplified in the following stanza, and there is no occasion for anticipating it here. V. 85. " And why?" I do not understand. You mean, I imagine, that the warrior must not expect to establish his fame as a hero while he is yet alive; but how does "living fame" sig- nify this ? The construction, too, is not good ; if you mean, with regard to Eame, while he yet lives, Fate denies him that. The next line is a bold expression of Shakespeare. The third, " ere from her trump — heaven breathed," is not good. V. 89. " Is it the grasp ? " You will caU me a coxcomb if I remind you, that this stanza in the turn of it is too like a stanza of " another body's."* * Is it the grasp of empire to extend, To curb the fury of insulting foes ? Ambition cease ; the idle contest end, Tis but a kingdom thou canst win or lose. Which stanza (perhaps now altered in consequence of the remark) Gray considers like one in the Elegy in a Country Churchyard; perhaps the one beginning — The applause of listening senates to command, &c. 236 LETTERS OF V. 98. " Truth ne'er can sanctifv," is an indifferent line. Both Mr. Brown and I have some doubt about the justness of this sen- timent. A kingdom is purchased, we think, too dear with the life of any man ; and this no less if there "be a life hereafter" than if there be none. V. 102. We say the juice of the grape "mantles," but not the grape. Y. 107. " By earth's poor pittance" will not do ; the end is very well, but the whole is rather too long, and I would wish it reduced a little in the latter part. I am sorry you went so soon out of town, because you lost your share in his Majesty's reproof to his chaplains : "I desire those gen- tlemen may be told that I come here to praise God, and not to hear my own praises." Kitt Wilson* was, I think, the person that had been * Dr. Christopher Wilson, of Catharine Hall, Cambridge, M.A. 1740, Rector of Fulham and of Halsted, Essex, Canon of St. Paul's, Bishop of Bristol in 1783, died April 1792, aged 77. " He died extremely rich, having, as Prebendary of Finsbury, made a most fortunate and lucrative contract for a lease with the City of London;" for when he came in pos- session of it, it brought in only a life-interest of 39/. 13s. 4c?.; and from it he received 50,000/. in his lifetime, and charged his estate with 50,000/. more in his will. See a full account of him and his contract in Nichols's Literary Anecdotes, ix. p. 519-524. THE POET GRAY. 237 preaching. This and another thing I have been told give me great hopes of the young man. Fobus was asking him what sum it was his pleasure should he laid out on the next elec- tion?* " Nothing, my lord." The duke stared, and said, " Sir !" " Nothing, I say, my lord ; I desire to be tried by my country." There has been as great confusion this week as if the French were landed. You see the heads of the Tories are invited into the bed- chamber ; f and Mr. P. avows it to be his advice, not as to the particular men, but the measure. Eobus knew nothing of it till it was done; and has talked loudly for two days of resigning. Lord Hardwick and his people say they will support the Whig interest, as if all was going to ruin, and they hoped to raise a party. What will come of it is doubtful, but I fancy they * Compare Walpole's Memoirs of George III. vol. i. p. 209, " The profusion exercised on this occasion, and which reduced the Court to stop even the payments of the King's Bedchamber, made men recall severely to mind the King's declaration on the choice of the Parliament, ' that he would not permit anything to be spent on elections.' " f The commencement of the present reign was also distin- guished by a grand creation of Peers, and far more offensively by the nomination of twelve additional Lords of the Bed- chamber, &c. See Belsham's History, vol v. p. 9 ; also Wal- pole's Memoirs of George III. vol. i. App. i. ii. 238 LETTERS OF will acquiesce and stay in as long as they can. Great confusion in the army, too, about Lord Fitzmaurice,* who is put over the head of Lord * William Viscount Fitzmaurice, promoted to the rank of Colonel Dec. 4, 1760. He became a Major-General July 10, 1762; Lieut -General May 25, 1772; General Feb. 19, 1783; and died senior of that rank in May, 1805. He never com- manded a regiment. Created Marquess of Lansdowne Nov. 30, 1784. He attained the courtesy-title of Viscount Fitzmaurice June 26, 1753, on his father being created Earl of Shelburne. Walpole alludes to the discontent, and says, " Lord Fitzmaurice made Aide-de-Camp to the King has disgusted the army," Misc. Corr. iv. 116. — Lord Lennox was Lord George Henry Lennox, second son of the 2d Duke of Richmond, junior Captain in 25th Regt. March 23, 1756; married in 1759 Louisa, fourth daughter of "William Ker, fourth Marquis of Lothian; promoted to the rank of Colonel in 1762; General, Oct. 12, 1793. Died in March, 1805, being the Governor of Plymouth. — Mr. Fitzroy was Charles, second son of Lord Augustus Fitzroy, who was second son of the second Duke of Grafton; created Lord Southampton in 1780; Lieut. -General in the army, and Colonel of 3rd Regt. of Dragoons. Died March 21, 1797. He was at this time Lieut. -Colonel of the 1st Foot Guards. — " Considering," says a friend, " that Mr. Fitzroy entered the service in 1752, and became Lieut. - Colonel in 1758, and that Lord G. Lennox was a Captain in March, 1756, and Lieut. -Colonel (probably) in 1758, the promotion of Viscount Fitzmaurice must indeed have been rapid, when two officers of so short a standing in the army felt themselves aggrieved thereby. Viscount Fitzmaurice was born in 1736; Lord Southampton in 1737; Lord G. H. Lennox in 1737; consequently Lord Fitzmaurice became THE POET GRAY. 239 Lennox, Mr. Fitzroy, and also of almost all the American officers. I have seen Mr. Southwell,* and approve him much. He has many new tastes and know- ledges, and is no more a coxcomb than when he went from hence. I am glad to hear you bode so well of Ponsonby and his tutor. Here is a colonel when twenty-four years old; Lord Southampton at- tained the same rank when twenty-five ; and Lord G. H. Lennox when little more than twenty-three years old. The two last- named became Major-Generals at thirty-five years of age, — a rank now scarcely attainable under the age of sixty.' 1 Lord Viscount Fitzmaurice was on the 10th May, 17G1, made Aide- de-Camp to his Majesty. See Gent Mag. May 17G0. See also Rockingham Papers, vol. i. p. 38. " Early in this reign Lord Fitzmaurice, being at the time in high favour with Lord Bute, was made Equerry to the King over the head of his superior officer, Lord Lennox. The Duke of Richmond, irritated by this slight to his relative, carried a memorial to his Majesty, and commented on the appointment in a manner that was neither ' forgiven nor forgotten,' by a Prince equally remark- able for his keen resentments and his retentive memory." Wal- pole says, " Lord Fitzmaurice, a favourite of Lord Bute, was made Equerry to the King, though inferior in military rank to Lord George Lennox and Charles Fitzroy, brothers of the Dukes of Richmond and Grafton. The Duke of Grafton made a direct representation to the King on the wrong done to his brother, and desired rank for him," &c. See Memoir of George III. vol. i. p. 2G, 27. * Mr. Henry Southwell was A.B. 1752, of Magdalen Col- lege; A.M. 1755; LL.D. 17G3. 240 LETTERS OF delightful new woman* in the burlettas ; the rest is all Bartholomew and his fair. Elisi f has been ill ever since he came, and has not sung yet. Adieu. I am truly vours. LETTER LXII. THE REV. WILLIAM MASON TO GRAY. Dear Mr. Gray, Jan. 8, 1761. I thank you much for your criticisms, but at present shall not take notice of them. They will stand me in good stead whenever I put the Eles^v in mv first volume, and till then let them pass. I thank you also very much for your Georgi- ana : if they be genuine, I thank you as an Englishman, and prefer them before everything * This was Signora Paganini, the wife of Paganini, a coarse man; she appeared in 1760. See Burney's History of Music, iv. 474, for a remarkable instance of her attraction. | A man of great reputation and abilities; performed at the Opera in London 1760 and 1761; a great singer and eminent actor. See Burney's History of Music, iv. 473-4 ; Walpole's Letter to Mann, i. p. 8; Misc. Letters, vol. iv. pp. 27, 326, 428. THE POET OKAY. 2 II that ever ended in ana. But vou are mistaken in your preacher ; it was Dr. Thomas Wilson,* of Westminster, who they say is a rogue; the other is only a coxcomb, but a sort of coxcomb that I hate almost as much as a rogue. If the Nouvelle Heloise be Housseau's, pity me, because I live at Aston, and have not seen it, and be sure send me some account of it, and that with speed. I find there is a new report that Lord H.f is to go to Ireland. This has induced poor Erederic Hervey % (glad of such an opportunity of renewing our correspondence) to write to me, and to tell me that his friends have hopes of making him First Chaplain, but that he begs first to know whether it will interfere with me, and whether it might not be made compatible with my interest. All this was so jellied over with friendship, that he thought, I fancy, I should scarce know the dish he presented me with. The letter I shall * Chaplain to the King. See Watt's Bibliotheca Britan- nica and Nichols's Lit. Anecdotes, vol. viii. p. 457. | The Earl of Halifax was Lord Lieutenant of Ireland Oc- tober, 17G1. \ On " poor Frederic Hervey," see Collins's Peerage, iv. 160. Born 1730; chaplain to the King; in 1767 pro- moted to the bishoprick of Cloyne; and in 1768 to that of Deny. Subsequently well known abroad and at home. R 242 LETTERS or tie up in a bundle with, one of Archbishop Hutton' s,* and some others which I keep as curiosities in their way. I have, however, in pity to his wife and family of small children, sent him an answer not so tart as he deserved, and given him full liberty of using all his interest in this matter. However, keep this a secret, because I promised to do it, and because, also, I should not have broken my promise could I have thought of anything better to write at present. I am glad at heart to find this annihilation of Toryism which you give me an account of. Eobus, besides lying, had only one other minis- terial art in his profession, which, too, was a species of lying, and this he exerted in making every man who was not a friend to the ministry a Tory. Was he asked to explain this, he had not skill enough in English history and the * Matthew Hutton, Archbishop of York 1747, translated to Canterbury 1757. Connected by family with Mason. At the death of John Hutton, Esq. of Marshe, near Richmond, an estate in the East Riding came to Mason in reversion. See Walpole's Misc. Corr. iii. 347; Mem. of George II. vol. i. p. 148. He gave Mason the prebend of Holme, in the cathe- dral of York, in 1756. See Harris's Life of Lord Hardwicke, ii 345, on the difficulties in filling up the see of Canterbury : " I have offered it to Sherlock and Gibson, who refused it, and so did Herring ; but was preA r ailed on to take it when Hutton went to York." There is an engraving of Archbishop Hutton. THE POET GRAY. 243 constitution of his country to do it, and there- fore he explained himself hy saying, a Tory was a Jacobite, and a Jacobite a Tory. This you may remember : one of his tools who could not cleverly make you either Tory or Jacobite, said you was worse — you was a Republican. May God send this measure a happy ending, and may the next generation be only distin- guished by the style and title of friends to their country. You have by this time heard Elisi. Pray give me an account of him or it as soon as possible, and send me also your receipt for chevichi, in plain terms. Have you made up your mind about Gothic architecture, and, con- sequently, given over your genealogical studies,* which, it seems, are so intimately connected with that science. Eor my part, I am meta- morphosing some good old homilies into new- fashioned sermons, and consequently spoiling every period of them. But what better can * Many instances of Gray's laborious inquiries into ge- nealogy appeared when his library was made public. None more striking, than in a copy of Dugdale's Origines, folio, in which Gray had gone through, page by page, the Avhole volume, filling up in the margin the aivns of all the families mentioned, with full descriptions of them. Tins volume is uow in the British Museum. R 2 244 LETTERS OF I do, living as I here do in almost absolute solitude, and in that state of life which my old friend Jeremy Taylor so well describes in his sermon aptly entitled the Marriage Ring. " Celibate life," says he, " like the flie in the heart of an apple, dwells in a perpetual sweet- ness, but sits alone, and is confined, and dies in singularity. But marriage, like the useful bee, builds a house, gathers sweetness from every flower, labours, and unites into societvs and republics," &c. If I survive you, and come to publish your works, I shall quote this passage, from whence you so evidently (without ever seeing it) took that thought, " Poor moralist, and what art thou," &c. But the plagiarism had been too glaring had you taken the heart of the apple, in which, however, the great beauty of the thought consists. After all, why will you not read Jeremy Taylor? Take my word and more for it, he is the Shakespeare of divines. Adieu, and believe me to be ever most entirely yours. THE POET GRAY. 245 LETTER LXIII. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. DEAR MASON, London, Jan. 22, 1761. I am delighted with Frederic Hervey and let- ter, and envy yon his friendship, for the founda- tion of it (I am persuaded) was pure friendship, as far as Iris idea of the thing extended ; and if one could see his little heart one should find no vanity there for over-reaching you and artfully gilding so dirty a pile, but only a degree of self-applause for having done one of the genteelest and handsomest things in the world. I long to see the originals and (if you have any gratitude) you will publish them in your first volume. Alas ! there was a time when he was my friend, and there was a time (he owned) when he had been my greatest enemy; why did I lose both one and the other of these advantages, when at present I could be so happy with either, I care not which ? Tell him he may take his choice ; it is not from interest I say this, though I know he will some time or other be Earl of Bristol,* but purely because I * See the last mention of him by Gray, in a letter tu Nicholls, 2nd May, 1771. " Sometimes, from vanity, he may do a right thing," &c. 246 LETTERS OF have long been without a knave and fool of my own. Here is a bishopric (St. David's) vacant, can I anyhow serve him? I hear Dr. Ays- cough* and Dean Squiref are his competitors. God knows who will go to Ireland ; it ought to be somebody, for there is a prodigious to-do there ; the cause I have been told, but, as I did not understand or attend to it, no wonder if I forgot it ; it is somewhat about a money-till, perhaps you may know. The Lords Justices absolutely refuse to comply with what the Government here do insist upon, and even offer to resign their posts ; in the mean time none of the pensions on that establishment are paid. Nevertheless two such pensions have been be- stowed within this few weeks, one on your friend Mrs. Anne Pitt (of 500/. a-year)4 which * Francis Ayscough, chaplain and preceptor to the Prince of Wales, rector of North Church, Herts, Dean of Bristol, author of Sermons, &c. married the sister of Lord Lyttelton. See account of him in Nichols's Anecdotes, vol. viii. 433, ix. 531, 808. t In 1761 Samuel Squire, Dean of Bristol, was appointed to the bishopric of St. David's. J For account of Mrs. Anne Pitt, sister to the Earl of Chatham, and Privy Purse to the Princess of Wales, and for mention of the places she held, see Walpole's Miscell. Corres. vol. iv. pp. 382, 307, 469, 475 ; Letters to Mann, ii.pp. 226, 268, 275; iii. pp. 57, 80, 107, 150; theGrenville Papers, i p. 85; THE POET GRAY. 2 17 she asked, and Lord B.* got it done immediately; she keeps her place with it : the other (of 400/.) to Lady Harry Boauclerk,t whose husband died suddenly, and left her with six or seven children very poorly provided for; the grant was sent her without being asked at all by her- self, or any friend. I have done with my news, because I am told that there is an express just set out for Yorkshire, whom you are to meet on the road. I hope you will not fail to in- form him who is to be his First Chaplain ; per- haps you will think it a piece of treachery to and Walpole's George III. vol. i. p. 85 ; where the passage is worth consulting. " She had excellent parts, and strong passions. It was Lord Bolingbroke that recommended her to the Prince; afterwards she obtained the patronage of Lord Bute, and got two large pensions. When she informed her brother of it, he answered, that he was sorry to see the name of Pitt among the pensions. When he accepted his, she copied his own letter and sent it to him." AValpole said of Lord Chatham and his sister, " that they resembled each other, comme deux gouttes de feu" She used to say that her brother never read any book except Spenser, See also Lord Mahon's History of England, vol. v. p. 225, and Selwyn Correspondence, i. p. 329. Lord Bolingbroke used to call Lord Chatham Sublimity Pitt, and his sister Divinity Pitt. In 1762 she had a third pension of 500/. a-year. She died 9th Feb. 1780. * Earl of Bute. | Lord Harry Beauclerk died July 8, 1761. See Collins's Peerage, i. 248. 248 LETTERS OF do so, or perhaps you will leave the thing to itself, in order to make an experiment. I* cannot pity you ; cm contraire, I wish I had been at Aston when I was foolish enough to go through the six volumes of the Nouvelle Heloise.t All that I can say for myself is, that I was confined at home for three weeks by a severe cold, and had nothing better to do. There is no one event in it that might not hap- pen any day of the week (separately taken), in any private family : yet these events are so put together that the series of them are more absurd and more improbable than Amadis de Gaul. The dramatis personce (as the author says) are all of them good characters ; I am sorry to hear it, for had they been all hanged at the end of the third volume nobody (I be- lieve) would have cared. In short, I went on * Here Mason commences this Letter, omitting the preceding- part. See Lett. en. p. 267, vol. iii. ed. Aid. f The original manuscript of the Nouvelle Heloise is in the Library of the Chamber of Deputies: the writing as legible as print, without one obliteration. The MS. was on beautiful small paper, with vignettes, and afterwards folded like letters. Rousseau used to read them in his walks. In Grimm's Cor- respondence may be seen Voltaire's sham prophetic review of the Heloise ; and in Marmontel's Essai sur les Romans, an excel- lent notice of it, very powerfully written, which called forth the praise of Madame de Genlis. See her Memoirs, iv.p. 266. THE POET GKAY. 249 and on in hopes of finding' some wonderful de- nouement that would set all right, and bring something like nature and interest out of ab- surdity and insipidity ; no such thing, it grows worse and worse, and (if it he Rousseau, which is not doubted) is the strongest in- stance I ever saw that a very extraordinary man may entirely mistake his own talents.* By the motto and preface it appears to be his own story, or something similar to it. The Opera House is crowded this year like any ordinary theatre. Elisif is finer than any- thing that has been here in your memory, yet, as I suspect, has been finer than he is. He appears to be near forty, a little pot-bellied and thick-shouldered, otherwise no bad figure ; his action proper, and not ungraceful. We have heard nothing, since I remember operas, but eternal passages, divisions, and flights of exe- * On this disparaging character of Rousseau's great work, see W. S. Landor, de Cultu Latini Serrnonis, p. 197. " Rossceo uec in sententiis ipse suavior est (qui parurn profecto praeter Miuvitatem habet) Isocrates, nee in verbis uberior aut amplioris in dicendo dignitatis Plato, nee Sophronisci filius melior sophista. Nemo animi affectus profundius introspexit, deli- catius tetigit, solertius explicavit. Odium vero hominuin quos insinceros Grains aut pravos existiinabat, aut religionis Christianorum iuimicos, transversum egit et prasceps judicium.'' t Sec Gray's Works, vol. iii. p. 268. 250 LETTERS or cution ; of these lie has absolutely none, whether merely from judgment, or a little from age, I will not affirm. His point is ex- pression, and to that all the graces and orna- ments he inserts (which are few and short), are evidently directed. He goes higher (they say) than Farinelli, but then this celestial note you do not hear above once in a whole opera, and he falls from this altitude at once to the mellowest, softest, strongest tones (about the middle of his compass) that can be heard. The Mattei* (I assure you) is much improved by his example, and by her great success this winter. But then the Burlettas and the Paga- nina.f I have not been so pleased with any- thing these many years ; she too is fat and about forty, yet handsome withal, and has a face that speaks the language of all nations. She has not the invention, the fire, and the variety of action, that the Spiletta had;| yet she is light, agile, ever in motion, and above all graceful ; but then her voice, her ear, her taste in singing : Good God ! — as Mr. liich- * Colomba Mattei, a charming singer and intelligent actress, and a very great favourite. f See note to Letter lxi. J The part of Spiletta in Gli Amante Gelosi : a burletta by Cocchi. See Btirney, iv. 465. THE POET GRAY. 251 arclson the painter says.* Pray ask my Lord, for I think I have seen him there once or twice, as much pleased as I was. I have long thought of reading Jeremy Taylor, for I am persuaded that chopping logic in the pulpit, as our divines have done ever since the Revolution, is not the thing ; but that imagination and warmth of expression are in their place there as much as on the stage, moderated however, and chastised a little by the purity and severity of religion, t * This learned and ingenious painter and critic on art, is now better known by bis writings than pencil. He generally painted and wrote in conjunction with his son, his inseparable companion and friend. The best account of him is in Wal- pole's Anecdotes of Painting and Noble's Continuation of Granger, iii. p. 382. He had a fine collection of the drawings of the old masters, which sold at his death for above 2,000/. At Strawberry Hill I saw a most interesting pencil drawing by him, in four compartments, containing portraits of Lord Bolingbroke, of Pope, of Pope's mother, and of Pope's father on his death-bed. His works are collected in 2 vols. 8vo. See Index to Monthly Eeview, vol. ii. p. 450, on Richard- son's Works. His work on the Pictures, &c. in Italy, was translated into French in 1722. Dr. Johnson's commendation on the "Treatise on Painting" is mentioned by Mr. North - cote, in his Memoir of Reynolds. As a critic he has received the praise of Fuseli. f Gray liked Sterne's Sermons. " He thought there u as good writing and good sense in them. His principal merit 252 LETTERS OF I send you my receipt for caviche* (Heaven knows against my conscience). Pray, doctor, will the weakness of one's appetite justify the use of provocatives ? In a few years (I sup- pose) you will desire my receipt for tincture of cantharides ? I do this the more unwil- lingly, because I am sensible that any man is rich enough to be an epicure when he has no- body to entertain but himself. Adieu, I am, a jamais, yours. consisted in his pathetic powers, in which he never failed." See Works, v. 39. i Gray's copy of Verral's Book of Cookery, 8vo. 1759, is- in my possession, and is enriched by numerous notes in his writing, with his usual minute diligence, and remarks on culi- nary subjects, arranging the subjects of gastronomy in scientific order. 1st. List of furniture necessary for a kitchen, which he classes under twelve heads. 2ndly. List of such receipts as are primarily necessary in forming essential ingredients for others, all accurately indexed to their respective pages. 3rdly. Five pages of receipts for various dishes, with the names of the inventors. The one referred to in this letter is as follows : " Caviche. (From Lord D e .) Take three cloves, four scruples of coriander-seeds bruised, ginger powdered, and saffron, of each half a scruple, three cloves of garlic ; infuse them in a pint of good white wine vinegar, and place the bottle in a gentle heat, or in water, to warm gradually. It is to be used as catchup, &c. in small quantity, as a sauce for cold meats, &c. &c." Probably Gray thought with Donatus on Terentii Andria — " Coquina, Medicince Jamulatrix est" v. i. 1,3; and that " Melior Medicinal pars appellatur 8iam7n'/c?7." THE POET GItAY. 253 LETTER LXTV. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. Dear Mason, p em b. Coll. Feb. 5, 1761. When the belly is full, the hones are at rest. You squat yourself down in the midst of your revenues, leave me to suppose that somebody has broke in npon the Dean before you, that Mr. Beedon has seized upon the precentorship, that yon are laid up with a complication of distempers at York, that you are dead of an apoplexy at Aston, and all the disagreeable probabilities that use to befall ns, when we think ourselves at the height of our wishes ; and then away you are gone to town while I am daily expecting yon here, and the first I know of it is from the Gazette. Why, if yon were Bishop of Lincoln* yon could not serve one worse. * Dr. John Greene, Master of Ben'et College, first appointed Bishop of Lincoln in 1761, which he held till his death in 1779. See note Letter lvi. "A third, that looks mighty modest, and has two little horns sprouting, but no mitre yet, we take for Dean G." He wrote two pamphlets, " The Principles and Practice of the Methodists considered." Mr. Tyson has given a list of his writings, among which are a few sermons and some " Dialogues of the Dead," printed in Mr. Weston's volume. The familiar name given him at the 254 LETTERS OF I wrote to you the same clay I received your letter, the 11th Jan. and then to Dr. Wharton, who sends you his congratulations to he de- livered in your way to London; here, take them, you miserable precentor. I wish all your choir may mutiny, and sing you to death. Adieu, I am, ever yours, T. G. Commend me kindly to Montagu. LETTER LXV. TO THE REV. JAMES BROWN. DEAR SlR, London, Feb. 9, 1761. If I have not sooner made answer to your kind inquiries, it has been owing to the uncertainty I was under as to my own motions. Now at last, I perceive, I must stay here till March and part of April are over, so I have accommo- dated myself to it ; and perhaps it may be better to come when your codlin hedge is in blooni, than at this dull season. My cold, which Mr. Bickham told you of, kept me at home above three weeks, being at first accom- University was " Gamwell ;" 'which appellation he also bears in some of the letters of the time. THE POET GRAY. 2~)~> panied with a slight fever, but at present I am marvellous. Not a word of the gout yet ; but do not say a word, if you do it will come. A fortnight ago I had two sheets from Mr. Pitt, dated Genoa, Dec. 23 ; he had been thirty days in going from Barcelona thither, a passage often made in four. He spends the winter with Sir Richard Lyttelton,* and hopes to pass the end of the carnival at Milan with Lord Strathmore, who has been ill at Turin, but is now quite recovered. He docs not speak with transport of Andalusia (I mean of the country, for he describes * Richard Lyttelton, K.B. He married the Lady Rachel Russell, sister of John Duke of Bedford, and widow of Scrope Egerton Duke of Bridgewater. He was first page of honour to Queen Caroline ; then successively Captain of Marines, Aide-de-Camp to the Earl of Stair at the battle of Dettingen, and Deputy Quartermaster-General in South Britain, with the rank of Lieut.-Colonel and Lieut. -General, &c. He was fifth son of Sir Thomas, fourth baronet, and younger brother of George first Lord Lyttelton See some letters by him in Chatham Correspondence, vol. ii. p. 173, &c. He was Go- vernor of Minorca in 1764, and subsequently Governor of Guernsey. See Walpole's Misc. Letters, iv. pp. 363, 424. He died in 1770. His house in the Harley Street corner of Cavendish Square was bought by the Princess Emily, and was afterwards Mr. Hope's, and then Mr. Watson Taylor's. See Grenville Papers, i. pp. 49, 249 ; and ii. pp. 442, 449. When at Minorca he was involved in some dispute with Samuel Johnson, who held a situation under him. See reference to it in Walpole's Letters to Lord Hertford, Feb. 6, 1764. 256 LETTERS OF only that in general, and refers for particulars to our meeting) : it wants verdure and wood, and hands to cultivate it ; but Valencia and Murcia (he says) are one continued garden — a shady scene of cultivated lands, interspersed with cot- tages of reed, and watered by a thousand arti- ficial rills. A like spirit of industry appears in Catalonia. He has written to Pa. also ; I sup- pose to the same purpose. The only remarkable thing I have to tell you is old Wortley's will,* and that, perhaps, you know already ; he died worth 600,000/. This is the least I have heard, and perhaps the truest ; but Lord J. and Mr. Montagu tell me to-day it is above a million, and that he had near 800,000/. in mortgages only. He gives to his son (who is 50,000/. in debt) 1,000/. a-year for life only. To his wife Lady Mary, if she does not claim her dower, 1,200/. a-year, otherwise this to go to his son for life, and after him to Lady Bute his daughter. To all Lady Bute's children, which are eleven, 2,000/. a-r>iece. To Lady Bute, for her life, all the remainder (no notice of my Lord) ; and after her, to her se- cond son, who takes the name of Wortlev ; and * See Horace Walpole's Letter to Mann, i. p. 3 6; and Memoirs of George LTI. vol. i. p. 76, for account of " old Wortley and his wealth ;" and see Letter to Dr. Wharton by Gray. See Works, vol. iii. p. 272. THE POET GRAY. 257 so to all the sons, and, I believe, daughters too in their order ; and if they all die without issue, to Lord Sandwich, to whom at present he gives some old manuscripts about the Montagu family. And now I must tell you a little story about • ,* which I heard lately. Upon her travels (to save charges), she got a passage in the Mediterranean, on board a man-of-war ; I think it was Commodore Barnet. When he had landed her safe, she told him she knew she was not to offer him money, but entreated him to accept of a ring in memory of her, which (as she pressed him) he accepted. It was 1 Lady Mary Wortley Montague. See another version of this story in Gray's Letter to Dr. Wharton, Letter cm. vol. iii. p. 274. There is a story told by Mr. J. Pitt (Lord Camelford), which makes so good a, pendant to the present one, that I may be excused for giving it. " I will find you a keepsake like that the Duchess of Kingston drew from the bottom of her capote for the Consul at Genoa, who had lodged her and clothed her I believe, and caressed her for anything I know. ' How do you like this diamond ring?' ' Very fine, my lady!' 1 This ruby ?' ' Beautiful!' < This snuff-box ?' < Superb!' &c. &c. &c. ' Well, Mr. Consul, you see these spectacles (and here she sighed) ; these spectacles were worn twenty years by my dear Duke (here she opened the etui, and dropped a tear) ; take them, Mr. Consul, wear them for his sake and mine; I could not give you a stronger proof of my regard for you." Letter of Lord Camelford, Paris, 1789. S 258 LETTERS OF a very large emerald. Some time after, a friend of his, taking notice of its beauty, he told him how he came by it. The man smiled, and de- sired him to shew it to a jeweller. He did so ; it was unset before him, and proved a paste worth 40 shillings. And now I am telling stories, I will tell you another, nothing at all to the purpose, nor re- lating to anybody I have been talking of. In the year 1688, my Lord Peterborough* had a great mind to be well with Lady Sand- wich, Mrs. Bonfoy's old friend. There was a woman, who kept a great coffee-house in Pall Mall, and she had a miraculous canary-bird, that piped twenty tunes. Lady Sandwich was fond of such things, had heard of and seen the bird. * In a Life of Lord Peterborough lately published, I observe with regret a mutilated and inaccurate version of this charm- ing story so well told by Gray. This must have been taken by the writer from some publication of Mr. Edward Jesse, to whom I casually mentioned it in conversation, and who most unexpectedly inserted his imperfect recollection of it in his work, unmindful of the words used on a similar occasion by an old writer. " II arriva a ses ecrits ce que Cujas a toujours apprehende qu'il n'arrivent aux siens, que les choses qu'il dictait, et que ses amis prenoient sans beaucoup y prendre garde, et qu'il ne faisait pas pour etre impri?nees, furent faites public sans choix et peu correctment." Vide Teissier, Eloges des Hommes Scavans. THE POET GRAY. 259 Lord Peterborough came to the woman and of- fered her a large sum of money for it ; but she was rich, and proud of it, and would not part with it for love or money. However, he watched the bird narrowly, observed all its marks and features, went and bought just such another, sauntered into the coffee-room, took his opportunity when no one was by, slipped the wrong bird into the cage, and the right into his pocket, and went off undiscovered to make my Lady Sandwich happy. This was just about the time of the Revolution, and, a good while after, going into the same coffee-house again, he saw his bird there, and said, " Well, I reckon you would give your ears now that you had taken my money." " Money ! " says the woman, " no, nor ten times that money now ; dear little creature ; for, if your Lordship will believe me (as I am a Christian it is true), it has moped and moped, and never once opened its pretty lips since the day that the poor king went away ! " Adieu. Old Pa. (spite of his misfortunes) talks of coming to town this spring. Could not you come too ? My service to Mr. Lyon. s 2 260 LETTERS OE LETTER LXVI. TO THE REV. JAMES BROWN. Dear Sir, May 26, 1761. I thank you for your kind inquiries and im- patience about me. Had I not been so often disappointed before, when I thought myself sure, I should have informed you before this time of my motions. I thought I was just setting out for Cambridge, when the man on whom I have a mortgage gave me notice that he was ready to pay in his money ; so that now I must necessarily stay to receive it, and it will be (to be sure) the middle of June before I can see Cambridge, where I have long wished to be. Montagu had thoughts of going thither with me, but I know not what his present intentions may be. He is in real af- fliction for the loss of Sir W. Williams, who has left him one of his executors, and (as I doubt his affairs were a good deal embarrassed) he possibly may be detained in town on that account. Mason too talked of staying part of the summer with me at Pembroke, but this may perhaps be only talk. My Lord* goes * Lord Holdernesse. See Walpole's George II. i. pp. 198, 239, 289; George III. i. p. 42-48. THE POET GRAY. 2G1 into Yorkshire this summer, so I suppose the parson must go with him. You will not see any advertisement till next winter at soonest. Southwell is going to Ireland for two months, much against his will. I have not seen my new Lady E.* hut her hushand I have; so (I'm afraid) I soon must have that honour. God send f may lie in just ahout the com- mencement, or I go out of my wits, that is all. The news of the surrender of Belleisle { is daily expected. They have not, nor (they say) pos- : By Lady E I have no doubt that Gray meant the wife of his friend Sir Henry Erskine, who married this year. See Gent. Mag. 1761, p. 246.—" Married Sir H. Erskine, Colonel of the 25th Regt. to Miss Jenny Wadderborn." In Gent. Mag. Feb. 1762, " the lady of Sir Henry Erskine, of a son and heir." Sir H. Erskine died in 1765, being then Major- General, M.P. for Anstruther, Secretary of the Order of the Thistle, and Colonel of the 1st Regt. of Foot. f This, however singularly expressed, no doubt refers to the Duke of Newcastle, whose presence at the Cambridge Com- memoration Gray appears much to have disliked. See Letter xxxv. " The old fizzling Duke is coming again, but I hope to be gone first;" and lii. " I am going to Cambridge, if that owl Fobus does not hinder me, who talks of going to fizzle there at the Commemoration." | This place surrendered June 13, 1761. See Grenville Papers, i. 364; Walpole's History of George III. i. pp. 57, 135 ; vol. ii. pp. 13, 223 ; Bclsham's History, vol. v. p. 29 ; Adolphus, i. p. 32. 262 LETTERS OF sibly can, throw in either men or provisions ; so it is looked upon as ours. I know it will be so next week, because I am then to buy into the Stocks. God bless you. I am ever yours, T. G. LETTER LXVII. TO THE REV. JAMES BROWN. Dear Sir, 1761. I hope to send you the first intelligence of the Church preferments, though such is your eagerness there for this sort of news, that per- haps mine may be stale before it can reach you. Drummond* is Archbishop of York, Hayter Bishop of London, Young of Norwich, New- ton of Bristol, with the residentiary ship of St. Paul's ; Thomas goes to Salisbury ; Greene, of * On these promotions of the Bishops, see Walpole's Memoirs of George III. vol. i. p. 73, and the Editor's note on Dr. Hayter, who Avas advanced on Lord Talbot's interest. Dr. Yonge obtained the mitre of Norwich through the Duke of Newcastle. Dr. James Yorke was translated in 1774 from the deanery of Lincoln to the bishoprick of St. David's, and in 1779 to Ely. It was this advancement of Hayter to London that so much annoyed and disappointed Warburton. See Gray's Works, vol. iv. p. 49, ed. Aid. THE POET GItAY. 203 Ben'et, to Lincoln; James Yorke succeeds to his deanery. As to the Queen,* why you have all seen her. What need I tell you that she is thin, and not tall, fine, clear, light brown hair (not very light neither), very white teeth, mouth , nose straight and well-formed, turned up a little at the end, and nostril rather wide ; com- plexion little inclining to yellow, but little colour ; dark and not large eyes, hand and arm not perfect, very genteel motions, great spirits, and much conversation. She speaks French very currently. This is all I know, but do not cite me for it. Mason is come, but I have not seen him ; he walks at the Coronation. I shall see the show, but whether in the Hall, or only the Proces- sion, I do not know yet. It is believed places will be cheap. Adieu. * See description of the Queen's person in Walpole's Let- ters, Sept. 9, vol. iv. p. 169; Memoirs of George III. vol. i. p. 71. 264 LETTERS OF LETTER LXVIII. THE REV. WILLIAM MASON TO GRAY. Dear Mr. Gray, Aston, July 20th, 1761. The old man was really dying when I wrote to you from Stilton ; but, in spite of all his old complaints, in spite of an added fever and fistula, he still holds out, has had strength to undergo two operations, and is in hopes of a perfect recovery. However, if he ever does die, I am now sure of succeeding him, and I find the object of much more importance than I at first thought, for, one year with another, by fines, &c, the preferment is good 230Z. per annum. The Coronation, &c. prevents Lady Holder- nesse from coming into the North ; but I am to meet his lordship at Doncaster the day after to-morrow, and proceed with him to Aske and Hornbv.* He will stay in the country only three weeks, and I shall follow him to town * Hornby Castle, in the North Riding of Yorkshire, situated north-west of Ripon. It Avas an ancient seat of the Conyers family; from whom it descended to the Darcies, and from them to the Osbornes. The late Duke of Leeds lived more at Hornby than at any other seat of his. It must not be confounded with another Hornby Castle, at no great distance from it, in Lancashire. THE POET OKAY. 265 three weeks after, as my waiting falls in the Coronation month. I wish you would write me an epithalamic sermon. It could not fail hut get me a mitre, next in goodness to Squire's. This letter is merely to tell you my motions, and so heg you will write to me, under his lord- ship's cover, to Aske,* near Richmond. I was at Chatsworth last week, and had the pleasure to find Lord Johnf perfectly recovered. My love to Mr. Brown. Believe me, dear Mr. Gray, Most cordially yours, W. Mason. * Aske, in Kichmondshire, now the seat of the Earl of Zetland : it is a hamlet in the parish of Easby. It was the seat of Sir Conyers Darcy, K.B., who died there in Dec. 1758. Sir Conyers was Lord-Lieutenant of the North Riding, and in Parliament for Richmond and for Yorkshire; beside hold- ing offices about the Court. He was guardian to the last Earl of Holdernesse during his long minority, when he resided much at Aske, and was in the house at Aston when the great fire occurred in a night devoted to Christmas festivities. Sir Conyers had no children, and Aske would pass to the Earl his nephew, and was probably sold by the Darcies or Osbornes to the Dundas family. f Lord John Cavendish: see Lord Mahon's Hist. hi. 287, and v. 90. 266 LETTERS OF LETTER LXIX. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON.* Dear Mason, August, 1761. Be assured your York canou never will die,f so the better the thing is in value the worse for you. The true way to immortality is to get you nominated one's successor. Age and diseases vanish at your name, fevers turn to radical heat, and fistulas to issues. It is a judgment that waits on your insatiable avarice. You could not let the poor old man die at his ease when he was about it ; and all his family, I suppose, are cursing you for it. I should think your motions, if you are not perverse, might be so contrived as to bring you hither for a week or two in your way to the Coronation, and then we may go together to town, where I must be early in September. Do, and then I will help you to write a * * * sermon on this happy occasion. Our friend Jeremy Bickhamt is going off to a living (better * Compare with this Letter the one printed by Mason, No. evil., vol. hi. p. 286, ed. Aid. f Mason MS. \ Jeremy Bickham, Fellow of Emanuel CoUege, B.A. 1740, M.A. 1744, B.D. 1751 ; mentioned in a previous note. THE POET GRAY. 267 than 400/. a-year) somewhere in the neighbour- hood of Mr. Hui'd ; and his old flame, that he has nursed so many years, goes with him. I tell you this to make you pine. I wrote to Lord John on his recovery, and he answers me very cheerfully, as if his illness had been but slight, and the pleurisy were no more than a hole in one's stocking. He got it, he says, not by scampering, and racketing, and heating his blood, as I had supposed, but by going with ladies to Vauxhall. He is the pic- ture (and pray so tell him if you see him) of an old alderman that I knew, who, after living forty years on the fat of the land (not milk and honey, but arrack-punch and venison), and losing his great toe with a mortification, said to the last that he owed it to two grapes which he eat one day after dinner. He felt them lie cold at his stomach the minute they were down. Mr. Montagu (as I guess at your instigation) has earnestly desired me to write some lines to be put on a monument, which he means to erect at Belleisle.* It is a task I do not love, knowing Sir W. Williams so slightly as I did ; * See Grenville Papers, i. 364; "Walpole's George III. pp. 57, 135 ; vol. ii. pp. 13, 223 ; Belsham's Hist. v. p. 29 (7 June, 1761); Adolphus's Hist. i. p. 32. 268 LETTERS OF but he is so friendly a person, and his affliction seemed to rne so real, that I could not refuse him. I have sent him the following verses, which I neither like myself, nor will he, I doubt : however, I have showed him that I wished to oblige him. Tell me your real opinion : — Here foremost in the dang'rous paths of fame, Young Williams fought for England's fair renown ; His mind each muse, each grace adorn'd his frame, Nor envy dared to view him with a frown. At Aix uncalTd his maiden sword he drew, There first in blood his infant glory seal'd; From fortune, pleasure, science, love, he flew, And scorn'd repose when Britain took the field. With eyes of flame and cool intrepid breast, Victor he stood on Belleisle's rocky steeps ; All gallant youth ! this marble tells the rest, Where melancholy friendship bends and weeps.* Three words below to say who set up the monument. * For this epitaph, see Gray's Works, ed. Aid. vol. i. p. 93, with a few variations: as ver. 5, "At Aix his voluntary sword he drew;" ver. 6, "infant honour-" ver. 9, "cool undaunted breast." See Walpole's Misc Letters, vol. iv. p. 140; Mem. of George in. vol. i. p. 57. " There feU Sir W. Williams, a gallant and ambitious young man, who had devoted himself to war and politics." Also George H. vol. iii. p 231-233; Selwyn Correspondence, vol. i. p. 305. Walpole writes to G. Mostyn, " You know Sir W. Williams has made Fred. Montagu heir to his debts." p. 144. THE POET GltAY. 269 LETTER LXX. TO THE REV. JAMES BROWN. DEAR SlR, London, Sept. 24, 1761. I set out at half an hour past four in the morning for the Coronation,* and (in the midst of perils and dangers) arrived very safe at my Lord Chamberlain's box in Westminster Hall. It was on the left hand of the throne, over that appropriated to the foreign ministers. Oppo- site to us was the box of the Earl Marshal and other great officers ; and below it that of the princess and younger part of the royal family. * Compare Walpole's account of the Coronation in his Letters to Horace Mann, vol. i. pp. 41-44, and Misc. Letters, iv. 171; Adolphus's History, vol. i. p. 35; also Walpole's George III. vol. i. p. 73 ; Letters to Conway, xliv. xlv. The following description of the Queen was written by a lady of high rank in Germany to one in England, 27 July, 1761, and is among the MSS. of the British Museum: — " Vordez vous le portrait de votre future reine tel qu'il m'a ete faite par une amie actuellement a Strelitz avec elle ? Cette princesse est de menue taille, plutot grande que petite. La taille fine, la demarche aisee, la gorge jolie, les mains aussi, le visage rond, les yeux bleux et douce, la bouehe grande mais bien bordee, d'un fort bel incarnat, et les plus belles dents du monde, que l'ouvrit toutes des qu'elle parle ou rit, extremement blanche, dansant tres bien, l'air extremement gracieux et accueillant, un grand air de jeunesse, et, sans flatterie, elle peut passer pour une tres jolie personne. Son caractere est excellent, doux, bon, compatissant, sans la moindre fierte." 270 LETTERS OF Next them was the royal sideboard. Then be- low the steps of the limit pas were the tables of the nobility, on each side qnite to the door ; behind them boxes for the sideboards ; over these other galleries for the peers' tickets ; and still higher the boxes of the Auditor, the Board of Green Cloth, &c. All these thronged with people head above head, all dressed ; and the women with their jewels on. In front of the throne was a triomphe of foliage and flowers resembling nature, placed on the royal table, and rising as high as the canopy itself. The several bodies that were to form the procession issued from behind the throne gradually and in order, and, proceeding down the steps, were ranged on either side of hall. All the privy councillors that are commoners (I think) were there, except Mr. Pitt, mightily dressed in rich stuffs of gold and colours, with long flowing wigs, some of them comical figures enough. The Knights of the Bath, with their high plumage, were very ornamental. Of the Scotch peers or peeresses that you see in the list very few walked, and of the English dowagers as few, though many of them were in town, and among the spectators. The noblest and most graceful figures among the ladies were the Marchioness of Kildare (as Viscountess Lein- THE POET GRAY. 271 ster), Viscountess Spencer, Countesses of Har- rington, Pembroke, and Strafford, and the Duchess of Richmond. Of the older sort (for there is a grace that belongs to age too), the Countess of Westmoreland, Countess of Albe- marle, and Duchess of Queensberry. I should mention too the odd and extraordinary appear- ances. They were the Viscountess Say and Sele, Countesses of Portsmouth and another that I do not name, because she is said to be an extraordinary good woman, Countess of Harcourt, and Duchess of St. Alban's. Of the men doubtless the noblest and most striking figure was the Earl of Errol, and after him the Dukes of Ancaster, Richmond, Marlborough, Kingston, Earl of Northampton, Pomfret, Vis- count Weymouth, &c. The men were— the Earl Talbot (most in sight of anybody), Earls of Delaware and Macclesfield, Lords Montford and Melcombe; all these I beheld at great leisure. Then the princess and royal family entered their box. The Queen and then the King took their places in their chairs of state, glittering with jewels, for the hire of which, beside all his own, he paid 9,0001. ; and the dean and chapter (who had been waiting with- out doors a full hour and half) brought up the regalia, which the Duke of Ancaster received 272 LETTERS OF and placed on the table. Here ensued great con- fusion in the delivering them out to the lords who were appointed to bear them ; the heralds were stupid ; the great officers knew nothing of what they were doing. The Bishop of Rochester* * Zachary Pearce, translated froin Bangor. He resigned the deanery of Westminster in 1788, and wanted to resign his bishopric, but was not permitted by law. He was a very good scholar, as his editions of Cicero and Longinus show ; a learned divine, and an excellent man, of a modest and unambitious temper. In 1739 he was appointed to the deanery of West- minster by Sir Robert Walpole, at the request of Lord Hardwicke. In 1747 he accepted the offer of the bishopric of Bangor with reluctance, though he promised " to do it with a good grace." In 1768 he consulted Lord Mansfield and Lord Northampton on the legality of resigning his dignities. On the objections raised to his relinquishing the see of Bochester, see Lord Dover's note in Walpole's Misc. Corresp. iv 49, who says, " The bishopric, as a peerage, is inalienable ;" but Walpole, in another letter, says," The Bishops are eager against Dr. Pearce's divorce from his see, not as illegal, but improper, and of bad example, have determined the King, who left it to them, not to consent to it." p. 403. Lord Bath offered his interest to get him translated to London, which he declined. See Life of Lord Hardwicke, iii. p. 351. See Warburton's Works, vol. xi. p. 355 ; and Welsby's Lives of Eminent Judges p. 237, for Dr. Pearce's rise; and his dedi- cation of Cicero de Oratore to Lord Macclesfield. Dr. Johnson wrote the celebrated dedication to Pearce's learned Commen- tary on the Gospels, published in 1777, in 2 vols. 4to. by his chaplain and executor, Rev. J. Derby. THE POET GRAY. 273 would have dropped the crown if it had not been pinned to the cushion, and the king was often obliged to call out, and set matters right; but the sword of state had been entirely forgot, so Lord Huntingdon was forced to carry the lord mayor's great two-handed sword instead of it. This made it later than ordinary before they got under their canopies and set forward. I should have told you that the old Bishop of Lincoln,* with his stick, went doddling by the side of the Queen, and the Bishop of Chester had the pleasure of bearing the gold paten. When they were gone, we went down to dinner, for there were three rooms below, where the Duke of Devonshire was so good as to feed us with great cold sirloins of beef, legs of mutton, fillets of veal, and other substantial viands and liquors, which we devoured all higgledy- piggledy, like porters ; after which every one scrambled up again, and seated themselves. The tables were now spread, the cold viands eat, and on the king's table and sideboard a great show of gold plate, and a dessert repre- senting Parnassus, with abundance of figures of Muses, Arts, &c, designed by Lord Talbot. This was so high that those at the end of the * Dr. John Thomas, who was this year translated to Salis- bury, and died 177G; succeeded at Lincoln by John Greene. T 274 LETTERS OF hall could see neither king nor queen at supper. When they returned it was so dark that the people without doors scarce saw anything of the procession, and as the hall had then no other light than two long ranges of candles at each of the peers' tables, we saw almost as little as they, only one perceived the lords and ladies sidling in and taking their places to dine ; but the instant the queen's canopy entered, fire was given to all the lustres at once by trains of prepared flax, that reached from one to the other. To me it seemed an interval of not half a minute before the whole was in a blaze of splendour. It is true that for that half minute it rained fire upon the heads of all the spec- tators (the flax falling in large flakes) ; and the ladies, Queen and all, were in no small terror, but no mischief ensued. It was out as soon as it fell, and the most magnificent spectacle I ever beheld remained. The King (bowing to the lords as he passed) with his crown on his head, and the sceptre and orb in his hands, took his place with great majesty and grace. So did the Queen, with her crown, sceptre, and rod. Then supper was served in gold plate. The Earl Talbot, Duke of Bedford, and Earl of Effingham,* in their robes, all three on horse- * Thomas Harcourt, succeeded 1743; born 1719, died THE POET GRAY. 275 back, prancing and curveting* like the hobby- horses in the Rehearsal, ushered in the courses to the foot of the haut-pas. Between the courses the Champion performed his part with applause. The Earl of Denbighf carved for the King, the Earl of Holdernesse for the Queen. They both eat like farmers. At the board's end, on the right, supped the Dukes of York and Cumberland ; on the left Lady Augusta ; all of them very rich in jewels. The maple cups, the 17 03; he was Deputy Earl Marshal and Lieutenant-General. " A man of considerable talent, but much eccentricity of deportment." See account of him in Rockingham Memoirs, vol. ii. p. 406. * It was "this prancing and curveting" that led to the duel between his Lordship and Wilkes. See a good account of it in the note to Walpole's Misc. Corr. iv. p. 311, signed C. Elizabeth Pitt, sister of Lord Chatham, it is said, lived openly with him as his mistress ! ! See Rockingham Memoirs, vol. i. p. 272. f Basil Fielding, sixth Earl, succeeded 1755, died 1800. He was a Lord of the Bedchamber, and Colonel of the War- wickshire Militia. See account of him in Rockingham Memoirs, vol. i. p. 2G1.; and Walpole's George the Third, iv. 229. He married Mary, daughter of Sir John Bruce Cotton, who was a co-heiress. Lord Gower asked him how long the honeymoon would last? he answered, "Don't tell me of honey- moan, it is harvest-moon with me." He had lived abroad nine years with Lord Bolingbroke, and appeared in the Rolliad as helping to throw out Fox's India Bill. T 2 276 LETTERS OF wafers, the faulcons, &c. were brought up and presented in form; three persons were knighted ; and before ten the King and Queen retired. Then I got a scrap of supper, and at one o'clock I walked home. So much for the spec- tacle, which in magnificence surpassed every thing I have seen. Next I must tell you that the Barons of the Cinque Ports, who by ancient right should dine at a table on the haut-pas, at the right hand of the throne, found that no provision at all had been made for them, and, representing their case to Earl Talbot, he told them, " Gentlemen, if you speak to me as High Steward, I must tell you there was no room for you ; if as Lord Talbot, I am ready to give you satisfaction in any way you think fit." They are several of them gentlemen of the best families ; so this has bred ill blood. In the next place, the City of London found they had no table neither; but Beckford* bullied * The well-known Alderman Beckford, Member for the City, and twice Mayor of London, father of a more illustrious son. He died during his mayoralty in 1770. " Alderman Beckford stood up for the immemorial privileges of his order to fare sumptuously, and intimated to the Lord Steward that it was hard if the citizens should have no dinner when they must give the King one, which would cost them ten thousand pounds ; the menace prevailed, and the municipal board was at last desirably furnished." See Rockingham Memoirs, i. p. 279. THE POET GliAY. 277 my Lord High-Steward till lie was forced to give them that intended for the Knights of the Bath, and instead of it they dined at the entertainment prepared for the great officers. Thirdly. Bussy was not at the ceremony.* He is just setting out for Prance. Spain has supplied them with money, and is picking a quarrel with us about the fishery and the log- wood, f Mr. Pitt says so much the better, and was for recalling Lord Bristol directly ; $ how- ever, a flat denial has been returned to their pretensions. When you have read this send it to Pa. * " Bussy is personally indisposed to this country. This I have long thought, and I am now convinced of it." Jenkinson to Mr. Grenville, i. 367, June 16, 1761. Bussy went to Court (Aug. 1761) ; he appeared as a stranger. Ibid. p. 373. f " The fisheries are to be left to France, but not Cape Breton." Ibid. pp. 372, 379, 387. \ " It is humbly submitted to his Majesty's wisdom that orders be forthwith sent to the Earl of Bristol to deliver a declaration signed by his Excellency, and to return imme- diately to England without taking leave ;" the celebrated advice in writing given to the King, previous to the resignation of Mr. Pitt and Lord Temple. See Grenville Papers, i. p. 386. See high praise of him in Rockingham Memoirs, vol. i. p. 56. Lord Bristol died in 1775. 278 LETTERS OF LETTEK LXXI. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. Dear Mason, London, Oct 1761. Perhaps you have not yet hanged yourself ; when you do (as doubtless you must be think- ing of it), be so good as to give me a day or two's notice that I may be a little prepared. Yet who knows, possibly your education at St. John's, in conjunction with the Bishop of Gloucester,* may suggest to you that the naked Indian that found Pitt's diamond f made no bad bargain when he sold it for three oyster- shells and a pompon of glass beads to stick in his wife's hair ; if so, you may live and read on. Last week I had an application from a broken tradesman (whose wife I knew) to desire my * William Warburton. f Allusion to Pope's lines, — Asleep and naked as an Indian lay, An honest factor stole a gem away. Moral Essays, Epist. iii. Mad. de Genlis, in her " Abrege de l'Histoire de la Regence," says, " Le diamant le plus gros et le plus parfait de l'Europe on le nomme ' le Regent] et quelquefois ' le Pitt] du nom de vendeur, Secretaire (TEtat en Angleterre. On en demandoit quatre millions, mais on le donna pour deux. II pese six cent grains. Pitt l'avoit acquis d'un ouvrier des mines du Mogul ;" — with as many mistakes as words. THE POET GRAY. 270 interest with the Duke of Newcastle for a tide- waiter's place; and he adds, " Sir, your speedy compliance with this will greatly oblige all our family." This morning before I was up, Dr. Morton, of the Museum,* called here and left the inclosed note. He is a mighty civil man ; for the rest you know him full as well as I do ; and I insist that you return me a civil answer. I do not insist that vou should get him the mastership ; on the contrary, I desire (as any body would in such a case) that you will get it for yourself; as I intend, when I hear it is vacant, to have the tide-waiter's place, if I miss of the Privy Seal and Cofferership. Yours, T. G. LETTER LXXII. TO THE REV. JAMES BROWN. Dear Sir, Nov. Sat. 176 1. Your letter has rejoiced me, as you will easily believe, and agreeably disappointed me. * Dr. Charles Morton, of the British Museum, is mentioned by Lord Chesterfield in his Letters, vol. i. p. 38. He was Keeper of the MSS. and Medals, and, after the death of Dr. Maty, principal librarian. He died Feb. 10, 1799. See Nichols's Anecdotes, vol. i. p C>19. 280 LETTERS OF I congratulate you in the first place ; and am very glad to see the college have had the spirit and the sense to do a thing so much to their own credit, and to do it in a handsome manner. My best service to Mr. Lyon ; * and tell him it ■will be a creat disoblisjation if mv ladv takes him away to pass the Christmas with her, just when I am proposing to visit him in his new capacity. I hope to be with you in about a week, but will write again before I come. Do persuade Mr. Delaval to stay ; tell him I will say anything he pleases of Have you read the negociations ? I speak not to Mr. Delaval, but to you. The French have certainly done Mr. Pitt service in pub- lishing them. The spirit and contempt he has shown in his treatment of Bussy's proposals, f whether right or wrong, will go near to restore him to his popularity, and almost make up for * Thomas Lyon, Fellow of Pembroke College 1761, third son of Thomas Lord Strathmore; admitted FelloAv Commoner 1756, elected Fellow November 1761, and vacated his Fel- lowship in 1707; his new capacity must mean as Fellow. James Philip Lyon, the second son of Lord Strathmore, was admitted Fellow Commoner in 1756, the same year as Gray. t See Adolphus's History, vol. i. p. 39-41 ; Walpole's Misc. Letters, i. p. 250; Walpole's History of George ni. vol. i. pp. 58, 133 ; Grenville Papers, vol. i. p. 379 ; ii. p. 220 . In the Rockingham Papers, i p. 22, his character is sketched. THE POET GRAY. 281 the disgrace of the pension.* My Lord Temple is outrageous ; he makes no scruple of declar- ing that the Duke of N.f and Lord Bute were the persons whose frequent opposition in coun- cil were the principal cause of this resignation. He has (as far as he could) disinherited his brother G. Grenville, % that is of about 4000/. * The title and pension given to Mr. Pitt which occasioned so much animadversion, and is supposed to have deprived the great Commoner, for a short time, of much of his popu- larity. See on this subject the Grenville Papers, vol. i. p. 418 ; ii. p. 519; when, in a conversation with the Duke of York, Mr. Grenville said on the subject of this pension, " he thought it the highest and most honourable testimony which the King could bestow, or a subject receive, at the moment of quitting the King's service, upon differing with his whole administra- tion." See also Life of Lord Hardwicke by Mr. Harris on this subject, vol. iii. p. 256. It appears that Lord Chatham would not have his pension on the Civil List, but it was placed on a duty of 4-| per cent. See also on this interesting subject Walpole's George III. vol. i. pp. 82, 86 note ; Adolphus's History, vol. i. p. 47 ; Chatham Correspondence, vol. ii. p. 146-153 and 158, for the explanatory Letter written by Lord Chatham to the Lord Mayor. See Walpole's Misc. Corr. iv. 131. f Newcastle. See Grenville Papers, vol. i. p. 388, and vol. ii. p. 402. J See Grenville Papers, vol. ii. pp. 404, 408, on Lord Temple's gift of 5000/. to his brother George Grenville's sons ; and see for a judicious survey of Lord Temple's character Quarterly Review, No. clxxx. p. 576, art. ix. 282 LETTERS or a-year, his father's estate ; and yesterday he made a very strange speech in the House that surprised every body. The particulars I can- not yet hear with certainty ; but the Duke of Bedford replied to it. Did you observe a very bold letter in the Gazette of Thursday last about Carr Earl of Somerset ?* How do you like the King's speech ?f It is Lord Hardwicke's. How do you like Hogarth's periwigs ? I sup- pose you have discovered the last face X in the * This allusion is, of course, to the growing favour of Lord Bute. At this time great irritation was felt at the resignation of Mr. Pitt and the increasing favouritism and influence of Lord Bute, and very strong letters were written in the papers ; but I have not found the letter to which Gray alludes. The London Gazette was only an official paper. In Lloyd's Evening Post of that period and month are several letters on the subject: to what particular paper Gray alluded it seems difficult to say. There were, besides the two papers mentioned above, " Reed's Weekly Journal" and the London Chronicle, which may be found in the Catalogue of the British Museum. Two Letters to the Earl of Bute are advertised this month, Nov. 17G1, in Lloyd's paper. f Belsham says, " The Session was opened by a well-com- posed speech from the throne," vol. i. p. 58 ; and Adolphus, Hist. i. p. 14; and the note on that part said to have been written by the King's own hand. See Grenville Papers, vol. i. p. 416. (Earl of Bute to Mr. Grenville.) \ Gray alludes to Queen Charlotte. She is without a coronet, the last in rank, and the first on the left hand of the picture. THE POET GRAY. 283 rank of peeresses to be a very great personage ; extremely like, though you never saw her. Good night. I am ever yours, T. G. l O J LETTER LXXIII. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. Dear Mason, p em b. Hall, Deer. 8, 1761. Of all loves come to Cambridge out of hand, for here is Mr. Delaval and a charming set of glasses that sing like nightingales;* and we have concerts every other night, and shall stay here this month or two ; and a vast deal of good company, and a whale in pickle just come from Ipswich ; and the man will not die, and Mr. Wood is gone to Chatsworth ; and there is nobody but you and Tom and the curled dog ; * See Walpole's Misc. Letters, vol. ii. p. 111. " Gluck, a German. He is to have a benefit, at which he is to play on a set of drinking-glasses, which he modulates with water. I think I have heard you speak of having seen some such thing." They were much in fashion about this time. In the St James's Chronicle, Dec. 3rd, 1761, is an advertisement: "At Mr. Sheridan's lecture on Elocution, Miss Lloyd succeeds Miss Ford in performing on the musical glasses fur the amusement <>/' genteel company." 1 28i LETTERS OF and do not talk of the charge, for we will make a subscription; besides, we know you always come when you have a mind. T. G. LETTER LXXIV. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. DEAR MASON, Cambridge, Jan. 11, 1762. It is a mercy that old men are mortal, and that dignified clergymen know how to keep their word. I heartily rejoice with you in your establishment, and with myself that I have lived to see it — to see your insatiable mouth stopped, and your anxious perriwig at rest and slumbering in a stall. The Bishop of London,* you see, is dead ; there is a fine opening. Is there nothing farther to tempt you? Peel your own pulse, and answer me seriously. It rains precentorships ; you have only to hold up your skirt and catch them. * Thomas Hayter succeeded Bishop Sherlock, translated from Norwich 1761; died the following year; succeeded by Thomas Osbaldeston, 1762. See Grenville Papers, ii. p. 384. " The great point now in town is, whether Thomas of Lincoln, or Hayter of Norwich, is to be Bishop of London ." — Lord Egremont to Mr. Grenville. THE POET GRAY. 285 I long to embrace you in your way to court. I am still here, so are the Glasses and their master. The first still delight me; I wish I could say as much for the second. Come, how- ever, and see us, such as we are. Mr. Brown is overjoyed at the news, yet he is not at all well. I am (which is no wonder, being un- dignified and much at leisure,) entirely yours, T. G. LETTER LXXV. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. DEAR DOCTOR, Cambridge, March 17, 1762. I send your reverence the lesson, which is pure good-nature on my part, knowing already, as I do, that you do not like it. No sooner do people feel their income increase than they want amusement. Why, what need have you of any other than to sit like a Japanese divi- nity with your hands folded on your fat belly, wrapped and, as it were, annihilated in the con- templation of your own copuses and revenues ? The pentagrapher is gone to town, so you have nothing to do but to go and multiply in your own vulgar way ; only don't fall to work and forget to say grace. 286 LETTERS OF The laureate has honoured me (as a friend of yours, for I know no other reason,) with his new play and his Charge to the Poets :* the first very middling; the second I am pleased with, chiefly with the sense, and sometimes with the verse and expression; and yet the hest thing he ever wrote was that Elegy against Friendship you once showed me, where the sense was detestable ;f so that you see it is not at all necessary a poet should he a good sort of man — no, not even in his writings. * The new play of Mr. Whitehead was " The School for Lovers," acted at Drary Lane 1762. His poem was " Address to youthful Poets, a poetic Charge." " This," says Mr. Cole- ridge, " is perhaps the best and certainly the most interesting of his works." See Biograph. Lit. i. p. 222. This Charge brought on him the vindictive resentment of Churchill, who attacked the Laureate with a very reprehensible severity. See Anderson's Life of Whitehead, p. 897, and Mason's Life of Whitehead, p. 106. The portrait of Whitehead, from which the print before his works is taken, has been kindly presented to me from Aston. f See Whitehead's Works, vol. ii. p. 129. On the subject of this poem, see a passage in Life of Whitehead, by Mason, p. 40, in which it appears that Gray gave very high commen- dation to it in point of poetry, but much disapproved the general sentiment it conveyed; saying that it ought to be entitled " a Satire on Friendship," and much more to the same purpose, &c. Mason suspects that the loss of Mr. Charles Townshend's friendship led Whitehead to write this poem. THE POET GRAY. 287 Bob Lloyd has published his works in a just quarto volume, containing, among- other things, a Latin translation of my Elegy ; an epistle, in which is a very serious compliment to me by name,* particularly on my Pindaric accomplish- ments ; and the very two odes you saw before, in which we were abused, and a note to say they were written in concert with his friend Mr. Colman ; so little value have poets for themselves, especially when they would make * Anderson says that Lloyd collected his poems in a 4to. volume, 17(i2, for which he obtained a very liberal subscrip- tion. They were reprinted in 2 vols. 8vo 1774, with an account of his life by Dr. Kenrick. His praise of Gray occurs in his Epistle to Churchill : — " What muse like Gray's shall pleasing, pensive, flow, Attempered sweetly to the rustic woe ; Or who like him shall sweep the Theban lyre, And, as his master, pour forth thoughts of fire ?" The Latin translation by him of Gray's Elegy is not to be praised for propriety or elegance of classical expression, in which Vincent Bourne stands unrivalled; but that this poem was not a good subject to select, has been proved by the un- successful attempts of others to transfer its beauties into the ancient languages. How are these lines to be translated into the words of those who had neither long-drawn aisles nor pealing anthems ? " When through the long-drawn aisle and fretted vaidt, The pealing anthem swells the note of praise." 288 LETTERS OF up a just volume. Mr. Delap is here, and has brought his cub to Trinity. He has picked up again purely since his misfortune, and is fat and well, all but a few bowels. He says Mrs. Pritchard spoilt his Hecuba* with sobbing so much, and that she was really so moved that she fell in fits behind the scenes. I much like Dr. Lowth's Grammar ;f it is concise, clear, and elegant. He has selected his solecisms from all the best writers of our tonsrue. I hear Mr. Hurd is seriously writing against Pingal, by the instigation of the devil and the bishop. J Can it be true ? I have exhausted all my lite- rary news, and I have no other. Adieu. I am truly yours, T. G. Mr. Brown has got a cap, and hopes for a suitable hood. You must write a line to tell him how to send them. I go to town on Monday, but direct to me here. * The Hecuba of Dr. Delap was acted in 1762, and met with very indifferent success. Baker, in his Biog. Dramatica, professes entire ignorance of the author, except his name. f The first edition of Bishop Lowth's Grammar was in 17G2. See on its merits, Home Tooke's Diversions of Purley, vol. ii. p. 90, and Mitford's Harmony of Language, p. 377. | Warburton, Bishop of Gloucester. THE POET GRAY. 289 LETTER LXXVI. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. Dear Mason, Monday, Pemb. Hall, 1762. If you still are residing and precenting at York, I feel a great propensity to visit you there in my way northwards. Do not he fright- ened ; for I do not mean to be invited to your house. I can bring many reasons against it, but will content myself with referring you to Mr. Whitehead's Satire on Friendship, the senti- ment of which you thought as natural as I did the verses. I therefore desire of you to procure me a lodging by the week (the cheaper the better), where there is a parlour, and bed- chamber, and some closet (or other place near it) for a servant's bed. Perhaps I may stay a fortnight, and should like, when I have a mind, to have any little thing dressed at home ; pro- bably I may arrive next week, but you shall have exacter notice of my motions when they are settled. Dr. Delap (your friend) is here, and we cele- brate very cordially your good qualities in spite of all your bad ones. "We are rather sorry that you, who have so just a sense of the dignity of your function, should write letters of wit and u 290 LETTERS OF humour to Lord D.* and his sweet daughter in the Royal (I think it is) or Lady's Magazine ; but you are very rightly served for your vivacity and reflection upon poor K. Hunter, f Adieu. I am truly vours, T. G. Pray write a line directly to say if you are at York. * There is no Lady's Magazine of that date in the British Museum. There is the u Royal or Gentleman's Magazine:'" through the volumes of 1761 and 1762 I have looked, but no letters to Lord D. and his daughter appear in them. f See Walpole's Misc. Corr. iv. 211-214. " In all your read- ing, true or false, have you heard of a young Earl, married to the most beautiful woman in the world, Lord of the Bedchamber, a general officer, and with a great estate, quitting everything, — his young wife, world, property, for life, in a pacquet-boat with a Miss ! I fear your connexion will but too readily lead you to the name of the peer; it's Henry Earl of Pembroke, the nymph Kitty Hunter. The town and Lady Pembroke were first witnesses to the intrigue, last Wednesday, at a great ball given at Lord Middleton's ; on Thursday they decamped." The peer was Henry, tenth Earl of Pembroke, who married in March, 1756, Lady Elizabeth Spencer, second daughter of the third Duke of Marlborough. They lived for some time separated, but he afterwards ran away with her ! I They were reconciled and lived together. See Walpole to G. Montague, March 2'J, 1763, for some additional anecdotes on this subject. THE POET GRAY.. 291 LETTEE LXXVn. TO THE REV. JAMES BROWN. DEAR SIR, Old Park, July 19, 1762. After my fortnight's residence at York, I am arrived here. The Precentor is very hopefully improved in dignity ; his scarf sets the fullest about his ears ; his surplice has the most the air of lawn-sleeves you can imagine in so short a time ; he begins to complain of qualms and indigestions from repose and repletion : in short il tranche du Prelat * We went twice a-day to church with our vergers and all our pomp. Here the scene is totally altered : we breakfast at six in the morning, and go to bed at ten. The house rings all day with carpen- ters and upholsterers, and without doors we swarm with labourers and builders. The books are not yet impacked, and there is but one pen * Mason was a Residentiary of York Cathedral, Precentor, Prebendary of Duffield, and Rector of Aston. " Mason," Gray writes to Dr. Wharton, " is Residentiary of York, which is worth near 200£. a-year. He owes it to our friend, Fr. Montagu, who is brother-in-law to Dean Fontayne. The precentorship, worth as much more, being vacant at the same time, Lord Holdernesse has obtained that for him. He may now, I think, wait for the exit with patience, and shut his insatiable repining mouth." See Works, iii. p. 263. Mason u 2 292 LETTERS OF and ink in the house. Jetty and Fadge (two favourite sows) are always coming into the entry, and there is a concert of poultry under every window : we take in no newspaper or magazine, but the cream and butter is beyond compare. You are wished for every day, and you may imagine how acceptable a corre- spondent you must be. Pray write soon, and believe me ever sincerely yours, T. G. LETTEE LXXVIII. TO THE EEV. WILLIAM MASON. DEAR MASON, Cambridge, Dec. 21, 1762. As to my pardon, for which you supplicate, you know too well how easily it is obtained without any reason at all ; but now I have a very good one, as I have read the third book of the Ghost,* where Churchill has so mumbled much disliked his residences at York. It was there that he became acquainted with Sterne, who held some preferment in the cathedral. * See Walpole's Memoirs of George III. vol. iii. p. 149. The editor says, " Churchill mentions the Ghost, only as a peg to hang the satire upon. It has much vigour ; but a key is wanted, and probably no one can supply one to the allusions, or even the regularly drawn characters of the greater part. Johnson, THE POET (J HAY. 293 Mr. Whitehead, to whom you owe all your principles (see the unpublished elegy de Ami- citia), that it would be base in me to demand any farther satisfaction. This only I shall add, that I would rather steal the Laureate's verses than his sentiments. I am sorry for the disageeable event you mention, which I learnt by mere accident from Mr. Curtail in a coffee-house. I do not doubt Warburton, Mansfield, and one or two more, appear in it." Mason, in his Life of Whitehead, alludes to these attacks, and particularly to the Ghost (p. 109); and he found among White- head's papers some unprinted fragments of a counter-scuffle which the Laureate was preparing, beginning — " So from his common place, when Churchill strings Into some motley form his damned good things," &c. It was Wilkes's design to give an edition of Churchill's Poems, in which much interesting information would have been afforded, and much obscurity removed. Lloyd allows that in this poem Churchill threw his dirt about with more than his usual abandonment. " Whose muse, now queen, and now a slattern, Tricked out in Rosciad, rules the roast, Turns trapes and trollop in the Ghost.''' It is unfortunate for our present purpose that Gray's manu- script notes on Churchill's poems which I possess, and which are copious on the Rosciad and some other of Churchill's poems, are entirely wanting in the Ghost; for in Gray's copy of Churchill's Poems, collected as they appeared, and bound up by him in one volume, the Ghost is omitted. 294 LETTERS OF it must have taken up a good deal of your thoughts and time, and should wish to know whether there are any hopes of the poor fellow's recovery. We have received your poetical packet and delivered them to the several parties. The sentiments we do not remark, as we can find nothing within ourselves congenial to them : for the expression, we hint (but in a low, timid voice) that there is a want of strength and spirit; in short, they are nothing like the choruses in Elfrida, only the lines that relate to Lady C 's beauty have made a deep impression upon us ; we get them by heart and apply them to our sempstresses and bed- makers. Tins is (I think) the sum and substance of our reflections here ; onlv Mrs. Rutherford observes that there is great delicacv and ten- derness in the manner of treating so frail a character* as that of Lady C , and that you have found a way to reconcile contempt * Probably the stanza — •' Each look, each motion, worked a new-born grace, That o'er her form its transient glory cast," &c. The praises of Lady Coventry's beauty in Walpole's and Selwyn's Letters are too well known to be repeated here. I will therefore give an account by the Duchess of Somerset, which has not been quoted. " I saw Lady Coventry there, who certainly is very handsome, but appears rather too tall THE POET GRAY. 295 and compassion : these might not be her words, but this was the sense of them ; I don't believe she had it from the doctor. I rejoice (in a weakly way you may be sure, as I have not seen him some years, and am in so different a way of life), but I rejoice to hear of any accession to Mr. Hurd's fortune,* as I do not believe he will be anything the worse for it. Forrester (whom I perceive you can still re- member) is removed from Eastonf to a better living by his patron Lord Maynard, on purpose to get rid of him ; for Easton is his own parish, and he was sick to death of his company. He is now seated just by his brother Pulter, J and they are mortal foes. to be genteel, and her* face rather smaller than one could wish, considering the height it is placed, and her dress appeared more in the style of an opera-dancer than an English lady of quality. Lady Di. Egerton and Mrs. Selwyn, granddaughter to .Miss Townshcnd, appeared either of them fully as pretty in my eyes, with the addition of great modesty." The ex- pression " so frail a character " alludes to the general rumour at the time, that Lord Bolingbroke had been too much in the good graces of the Countess. * Mr. Hurd had the sinecure Rectory of Folkton, near Bridlington, Yorkshire, given him by the Lord Chancellor (Karl of Northington), on the recommendation of Mr. AJlen, of Prior Park, Nov. 2, 1702. f Near Dunmow, Essex, the seat of Lord Maynard. \ His brother, " Poulter Forrester." 296 LETTERS OF Mr. Brockett has got old Turner's professor- ship, and Delaval has lost it.* When we meet I have something to tell you on this subject. I hope to continue here till March ; if not, I shall inform you. How does the peace agree with you ? Adieu. I am ever yours. LETTER LXXIX. TO THE REV. JAMES BROWN. DEAR SlR, Aston, Jan. 15th, 1763. I send you with this a drawing of the ruin you were so much pleased with when you saw it at York.f I take it certainly to have been * In a manuscript pocket-book of Gray's, at Aston, of the year 1762, I read the following entry: — "Nov. 4. Prof, asked of D. of N. by Lord P. and Sir F. B. D. (i.e. Sir Francis Blake Delaval). — Saturday, Nov. 1762. Heard for certain that the professorship is given away, and not to D 1." On Delaval, a Fellow of Pembroke College, see Gray's Works, vol. iii. p. 27 ; iv. p. 222 ; and Nicholls' and Gray's Corres- pondence, p. 76, " Delaval is an honest gentleman." Sir Henry Erskine applied to Lord Bute for Gray ; " Next to myself," Gray writes, " I wished for it for him," (Delaval). See Works, iii. p. 301. f A small Gothic chapel near the north-west end of York Cathedral, with which Mr. Gray was much struck by the beautiful proportion of the windows. See Gray's Works, iii, THE POET GRAY. 297 the chapel of St. Sepulchre, founded by Arch- bishop Roger, of which Dugdale has given us the original charta fundationis ; but, as this opinion seems to contradict the opinion of Torre, and of Drake too, who follows him, it is necessary to produce authentic authority in proof of my assertion. These two learned anti- quaries suppose that the chapel in question joined to the minster. Thus Torre : " Roger (Archbishop) having built against the great church a chapel." And Drake : " Roger was buried in the cathedral, near the door of St. Sepulchre's chapel, which he himself had founded."*— Vide Drake's Ebor., p. 478, p. 421. From these accounts we should be led to con- clude that this chapel was as much and as close an appendage to the minster as the chapter- house is; but the original records, on which they found this opinion, may I think be con- strued very differently. Archbishop Roger himself, in his charta fundationis, describes its situation thus : — p. 303. See cut of it in Drake's and Burton's Histories of York. The history and date of it has, I understand, been a subject of much controversy. * " The present tomb of Archbishop Roger is even of a later date than Melton. I suspect the body to have been removed, and the tomb to have been erected about Henry VIII. 's time." MS. note of Dr. Whitaker. 298 LETTERS OE " capellani quani juxta majorem ecclesiam ex- truxinius." "Juxta" is surely "near" only, not " adjoining ;" and this ruin is near enough. In the extract of this archbishop's life, from an ancient MS. which Dugclale also giyes us, we find these words, " Condidit etiam Capellani Sancti Sepulchri ad januam ipsius Palatii ex parte boreali juxta eccl'am S. Petri." The ruin in question might very probably be connected with the palace gate by a cloister, of which on one side there are a string of arches remaining; and on the outside of the minster, oyer the little gate next the tomb, there are also yestiges of the roof of a cloister, which I imagine went aside the palace gateway, and connected the three buildings ; yide plan. But between this little gate and the palace gate (which still remains) it is very evident there was no room for anything but a cloister, for I do not think they are twenty yards asunder. The last and only further account I can find of the situation is from the same Life, where it is said the canons of St. Peter, " grayiter niur- murabant super situ dicta3 capellse eo quod nimis adhsesit matrici ecclesise." This I think need not be translated literally ; the word "nimis" leads one to a metaphorical sense. The priests of St. Sepulchre were too near neighbours to St. Peter's canons, and THE POET GKAV. 299 were troublesome to them ; accordingly we find the archbishop, to quiet matters, ordered that the saint of his chapel should make them a recompense, which is in this extract stated. To these arguments I would add, that Arch- bishop Roger's donation was very great (as we find in Drake) to this chapel ; and, from the number of persons maintained in its service, 1 question not but there was a large convent built round it, of which there are plainly the foundations still to be seen ; and what puts the matter out of all doubt that this building was separate and entire, though indeed near to the minster, is the following fact, viz. that the tithes of the chapel and chapel itself were sold to one Webster, anno 42 Elizabeth : " Capella vocat. St. Sepulcre's Chapell prope Eccles. Cath. Ebor. cum decimis ejusdem. W. Webster. Ap. 4, anno 4 Eliz." — Rolls. Chap. Thus you see the "juxta" and "prope" are clearly on my side; the " nimis adluesit' : is equivocal. I conclude with a rude draught of the platform according to my idea, but without any mensura- tion, and merely to explain what has been said. I am with the greatest respect and deference to your sagacity, Yours, &c. &c. &c. P.S. I ought to mention to you, that in the transept (I think you call it) of the church, 300 LETTERS OF % tn namely, at B, there is at the top over the large pillars, a range of stonework like the windows in the ruin, viz. three pointed arches under a circular one, hut of a clumsy proportion. This part I think you said was the oldest in the minster. Johnny Ludlam * found this out. * There were two persons well known in literature and science, the Rev. "William and the Rev. Thomas Ludlam, both Fellows of St. John's College. William was M.A. 1742, and died 1788; Thomas was M.A. 1752, and died 1811. They were both highly esteemed by Dr. Balguy and Dr. Ogden; and Bishop llurd was so pleased with the merits of the Essays on THE POET GRAY. 301 Perhaps it contradicts all I have been saying, and proves the building much older than Arch- bishop Roger. LETTER LXXX. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. DOCTISSIME DOMINE, Feb. 8, 17G3. Anne tibi arrident complimenta ? * If so, I hope your vanity is tickled with the verghe d'oro of Count Algarotti, and the intended translation of Signor Agostino Paradisi. For my part I am ravished (for I too have my share), and moreover astonished to find myself the particular friend of a person so celebrated for his politezza e dottrina as my cousin Taylor Howe.f Are you upon the road to see all these Theological Subjects as to contribute to the expense of the publication. My friend Mr. Nichols agrees with me in thinking that one of these brothers was alluded to: the familiar name Johnny being given to him from his residence at St. John's College. * A foreign scholar dining at Pembroke College, when the conversation was carried on in Latin, one of the Fellows ad- dressed him in these words : " Domine, anne tibi arrident herbag?" — (Sir, do you choose any greens?) MS. Note of Dr. Bennet, Bishop of Cloyne. See Gray's Works, ed. Aid. iii. p. 303. j William Taylor Howe, Esq. of Standon Place, near Ongar, Essex, an honorary Fellow of Pembroke College, " now on his 302 LETTERS OF wonders, and snuff up the incense of Pisa, or has Mr. Brown abated your ardour by sending you the originals? I am waiting with impatience for you and Mr. Hurd, though (as the Bishop of Gloucester has broke his arm*) I cannot expect him to stay here, whatever you may do. I am obliged to you for your drawing, and very learned dissertation annexed. You have made out your point with a great degree of probability (for, though the " nimis adhsesit" travels in Italy, where he made acquaintance with Count Alga- rotti, and had recommended to him Gray's Poems and Mason's Dramas. After their perusal he received a letter from the Count, written in that style of superlative panegyric peculiar to Italians. The Count also addressed Signor Paradisi, a Tuscan poet, advising him to translate Mason's Dramas, par- ticularly Caractacus." — Mason. Lord Chesterfield says, " Count Algarotti is a young Fontenelle." See his Letters, vol. iv. p. 384. See also Gray's Works, vol. iv. Lett. cxu. cxx. cxxi. cxxm. cxliv. on Count Algarotti and his Works. When the Count was in England, I have heard that he lived much with Lord Hervey and Lady Mary W. Montagu. They both wrote commendatory verses on his works. * Dr. Warburton, Bishop of Gloucester, broke his arm, 1763, while walking in the garden at Prior Park. See liis Letter to Dr. Hurd, p. 340, in Hurd and Warburton's Cor- respondence; and his Letter to Dr. Stukeley, 6 August, 1763, on the consequences of it, by the Bishop, in Nichols's Lit. Illust. ii. 56. A pleasing domestic picture of the Bishop and his wife may be found in the same volume, p. 839, written . Dr. Cuming. THE POET GRAY. 303 might startle one, yet the sale of the tithes and chapel to "Webster seems to set all right again), and I do believe the building in ques- tion was the chapel of St. Sepulchre ; but then that the ruin now standing was the individual chapel, as erected by Archbishop Roger, I can by no means think. I found myself merely on the stvle and taste of architecture. The vaults under the choir are still in being, and were undoubtedly built by this very archbishop. They are truly Saxon, only that the arches are pointed, though very obtusely. It is the south transept (not the north) that is the oldest part of the minster now above ground. It is said to have been begun by Geoffrey Plantagenet, who died about thirty years after Roger, and left it unfinished. His successor, Walter Grey, completed it; so we do not exactly know to which of these two prelates we are to ascribe any certain part of it. Grey lived a long time, and was archbishop from 1216 to 1255 (39 mo Hen. III.) ; and in this reign it was that the beaut v of the Gothic architecture be^an to appear. The chapter-house is in all probability his work, and (I should suppose) built in his latter days, whereas what he did of the south transept might be performed soon after his accession. It is in the second order of this 304 LETTERS OF building that the round arches appear, in- cluding a row of pointed ones (which you men- tion, and which I also observed), similar to those in St. Sepulchre's Chapel, though far inferior in the proportions and neatness of workmanship. The same thing is repeated in the north transept, but this is only an imita- tion of the other, done for the sake of regu- larity, for this part of the building is no older than Archbishop Romaine, who came to the see in 1285, and died 1296. All the buildings of Henry the Second's time (under whom Roger lived, and died, 1181) are of a clumsy and heavy proportion, with a few rude and awkward ornaments ; and this style continues to the beginning of Henry the Third's reign, though with a little improve- ment, as in the nave of Fountains Abbey, &c. Then all at once come in the tall piqued arches, the light clustered columns, the capital of curl- ing foliage, the fretted tabernacles and vault- ings, and a profusion of statues, &c, that con- stitute the good Gothic style, together with decreasing and flying buttresses and pinnacles on the outside. Nor must you conclude any thing from Roger's own tomb, which has, I remember, a wide surbased arch with scalloped ornaments, &c. : for this can be no older than THE POET GRAY. 305 the nave itself, which was built hy Archbishop Melton after the year 1315, one hundred and thirty years after our Roger's death. ***** Pray come and tell me your mind, though I know you will be as weary of me as a dog, because I cannot play upon the glasses, nor work joiner's work, nor draw my own picture. Adieu, I am ever Yours. Why did not you send me the capital in the corner of the choir ? I have compared Ilelvetius* and Elfrida, as you desired me, and find thirteen parallel pas- sages, five of which at least are so direct and close as to leave no shadow of a doubt, and therefore confirm all the rest. It is a pheno- menon that yon will be in the right to inform * See in Gray's Works, vol. iii. pp. 306-311, a very long note of nearly six pages, by Mason, on the subject of this plagiarism by Helvetius; but Dr. Bennet, the Bishop of Cloyne, in a MS. note of his copy of Mason and Gray, which I had, writes, " This is a very pettish remark of Mason, especially as there seems no doubt that Helvetius was imposed upon.'' The curious part of the matter also is, that in the MS. this part of the letter beginning " I have compared Helvetius," &c. to the end, is not in Gray's but in Mason's writing, added to Gray's letter. X 306 LETTERS OF yourself about, and which I long to under- stand. Another phenomenon is, that I read it without finding it out ; all I remember is that I thought it not at all English, and did not much like it ; and the reason is plain, for the lvric flights and choral flowers suited not in the least with the circumstances or character of the speaker as he had contrived it. LETTER LXXXI. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. Dear Mason, March 6, 1763. I should be glad to know at what time you think of returning into the North, because I am obliged to be in town the end of this month, or the beginning of next, and hope somewhere or other to coincide with you, if the waters are not too much out. I shall trouble you, in case you have any call into the city (or if not your servant may do it), to pay the insurance of a house for me at the London Assurance Office in Birchin Lane. You will show them the receipt, which I here inclose. Pay twelve shillings, and take another such receipt stamped, which must be to 25th March, 17G4. THE POET OKAY. 307 You may remember that I subscribed long since to Stuart's book of Attica ;* so long since, that I have either lost or mislaid his receipt (which I find is the case of many more people). Now he doubtless has a list of names, and knows this to be true ; if, therefore, he be an honest man, he will take two guineas of you, and let me have my copy (and you will choose a good impression) ; if not, so much the worse for him. By way of douceur, you may, if you please (provided the subscription is still open at its first price), take another for Pembroke Hall, and send them down together ; but not unless he will let me have mine, and so the worshipful society authorise me to say. All these disbursements the college and I will re- pay you with many thanks. Where is your just volume, and when will you have done correcting it ? Remember me to Stonhewcr and Dr. Gisborne, and believe me, Ever yours, T. G. * The Antiquities of Athens Measured and Delineated, by James Stuart, folio. See Walpole's Mis. Cor. iv. 190, for an anecdote of Hogarth's caricature of him as Athenian Stuart. A house in St. James's Square, Mrs. Montagu's in Portman Square, with a few others, remain as specimens of his archi- tecture, and the Chapel of Greenwich Hospital. See life of him in Nichols's Literary Anecdotes, vol. ix. pp. 146, 147. x2 308 LETTERS OF LETTER LXXXII. REV. WILLIAM MASON TO GRAY. DEAR Mr. GRAY, York, June 28th, 1763. Stonhewer tells me that you are returned to Cambridge ; therefore I trust you are at leisure to read and to answer my letter, and to tell me what is to he done about the count and his Coserella. One cannot thank him for them, I think, till one has read them ; and for my part I can only thank him in plain English when- ever I do it. Pray write me your mind as to this matter. You cannot think what a favourite I am of Mr. Bedingfield's. I might have had an agate and gold snuff-box from him the other day, and why think you ? only because I gave him an etching of Mr. Gray. "Lord, Sir," says I, " would you repay me with a thing of this value for a thing not worth three halfpence ?" " What," says he, " a portrait of Mr. Gray done by Mr. Mason of no value !" &c. &c. In short he pressed me to accept it till there was hardly any such thing as refusing ; however, I refused to the last, which you will own to be miraculous when you consider my avarice, my fondness for trinkets, and when I tell you the box was won- derfully handsome, and withal had a Trench THE POET GRAY. 309 hinge. This said gentleman is shortly going to leave York entirely, without having resolved in what other place to reside. To say the truth, I am not displeased at this ; for of all the ad- mirers I have had in my time, I think he would tire me the most was I to have much of him. lie goes from hence to Norfolk first with his family, and that some time this next month, and intends you a visit in his way. Get your arm-chair new stuffed ; — no, the old stuffing will have more inspiration in it. I send you on the other page a Sonnet intended to prefix to my first volume (Gray willing). It has, I assure you, cost me much pains, and yet it is not yet what it should be ; however I will do no more at it till you have seen it, and send me your opinion of it. I have got about ten subscribers to Smart, and do not know how to transmit him the money. Stonhewer advises me to keep it, as he hears he is in somebody's hands who may cheat him. I have seen his Song to David,* and * The Song to David, published in 1763, written during the poet's confinement, when he was denied the use of pen, ink, and paper, and was obliged to indent his lines with the end of a key on the Avainscot. See Anderson's Life of Smart, p. 122. Only a fragment of this song is given in Anderson's edition; but the entire poem, which is there supposed to be lost, has since been recovered and printed. 310 LETTERS OF from thence conclude him as mad as ever. But this I mention only that one should endeavour to assist him as effectually as possible, which one cannot do without the mediation of a third person. If you know anybody now in London (for Stonhewer has left it) whom I can write to on this subject, pray tell me. It is said in the papers he is prosecuting the people who confined him ; if so, assisting him at present is only throwing one's money to the lawyers. Give my love to Mr. Brown and service to the college. Yours most sincerely, W. Mason. SONNET.* D'Arcy, to thee, whate'er of happier vein, Smit Avith the love of song my youth essay 'd, This verse devotes; from that sequester'd shadef Where letter'd ease, thy gift, endears the scene, Here as the light-wing'd moments glide serene; I arch| the bower, or, through the tufted glade, § In careless flow the simple pathway lead, And strew with many a rose the shaven green. * This Sonnet to the Earl of Holdernesse, the patron of Mason, is prefixed to the first volume of Mason's Works, in 4 vols. 8vo. f Aston's secret shade. — Var. j: Weave. — Var. § Around the tufted mead. — Var. THE POET GRAY. 311 So, to deceive my solitary days, Pleas'd may I toil till life's vain vision end, Nor own a wish beyond yon woodbine sprays ; [nglorious, not obscure, if D'Arcy lend His wonted smile to these selected lays; The Muse's patron, but the Poet's friend.* VV. M Aston, May, 1763. letter lxxxi1i. to the rev. william mason. Dear Mason, 1763. As I have no more received my little thing than yon have yonrs, though they were sent by the Beverley, Captain Allen, I have re- turned no answer vet; but I must soon, and that in plain English, and so should you too. In the meantime I borrowed and read them. That on the Opera is a good clever dis- sertation, dedicated to Gugliclmo Pitt; the other (II Congresso di Citera),t in poetical prose, * With rural toils ingenuous arts I blend, Secure from envy, negligent of praise, Yet not unknown to fame, if D'Arcy lend His wonted smile to dignify my lays. — Var. f Algarotti born 1726, died 1764. He was intimate with Voltaire, and Frederic of Prussia conferred on him the title of Count. His monument (which I have seen) was erected by 312 LETTERS OF describes the negociation of three ambassa- dresses sent by England, France, and Italy to the Court of Cupid, to lay before Mm the state of his empire in the three nations ; and is not contemptible neither in its kind; so pray be civil to the count and Signor Howe. I think it may be time enough to send poor Smart the money you have been so kind to collect for him when he has dropped his law- suit, which I do not doubt must go against him if he pursues it. Gordon (who lives here) knows and interests himself about him ; from him I shall probably know if he can be per- suaded to drop his design. There is a Mr. Anguish in town (with whom I fancy you were once acquainted) ; he probably can best inform you of his condition and motions, for I hear he continues to be very friendly to him. this King in the Campo Santo at Pisa, with the inscription " Algarotto, Ovidii asmulo, Newtoni discipulo, Fredericus Magnus." His works were published at Venice in 17 vols, fcivo. 1791-1794. Mrs. Carter translated his Newtoniasmo. 11 Congresso has been translated into French, with others of his works. Tessaldo, in his Biographia, has given a list of the writers who have treated of the life of Algarotti, vol. vi. p. 175. It is said that he contributed to reform and improve the Italian Opera. Gray writes to Mr. Hurd, " The Congress of Cithera 1 had seen and liked before; the Giudicio d'Amore is an addition rather inferior to it." See Works, iv. p. 100. THE POET GRAY. 313 When you speak of Mr. Bedingficld, you have ;i 1 ways a dash of gall that shows your unfor- giving temper, only because it was to my great chair he made the first visit. For this cause you refused the snuff-box (which to punish you I shall accept myself), and for this cause you obstinately adhere to the Church of England. Hike your Sonnet* better than most dedica- tions ; it is simple and natural. The best line in it is : — " So, to deceive my solitary days," &c. There are an expression or two that break the ?*epose of it by looking common and overworn : " sequestered shade," " woodbine sprays," "selected lays;" I dare not mention "lettered ease." "Life's vain vision" does not pro- nounce well. Bating these, it looks in earnest, and as if you could live at Aston, which is not true ; but that is not mv affair. I have got a mass of Pergolesi,f which is all * See for this Sonnet Letter lxxxii. j it was Mr. Walpole's opinion that Gray first brought the cuinpositions of Pergolesi into England, though he does not mention Pergolesi in his Letters. Mason and Walpole had heard from him that he regarded the vocal compositions of this master as models of perfection ; but the Salve Kegina was performed in England at the Haymarket, in 1740, so that it could not have been brought into this country by Gray, who did net arrive in England from Italy till the August of the 314 LETTERS OF divinity ; but it was lent me, or you should have it by all means. Send for six lessons for the pianoforte or harpsichord of Carlo Bach, not the Opera Bach, but his brother. To my fancy they are charming, and in the best Italian style. Mr. Neville and the old musicians here do not like them, but to me they speak not only music, but passion. I cannot play them, though they are not hard ; yet I make a smat- tering that serves " to deceive my solitary days;" and I figure to myself that I hear you touch them triumphantly. Adieu ! I should like to hear from you. The Petit Bon* sends his love to you. All same year. — Burney's Hist, of Music, iv. 535. " In Mr. Gray's interesting library I found several volumes (six?) of MS. music, which Mr. Gray had selected when in Italy. At that time very little music was printed in Italy, and none but the best was made an article of traffic. I turned them over without finding anything of value that had not since been printed. The Dutch, without having the least pretension to musical knowledge, printed many of the first authors, and as an article of trade sold the Italian compositions all over Europe." See Gardiner on Music and Friends, ii. 722. * The affectionate and friendly title given by Gray to his friend Dr. James Brown, Fellow and subsequently Master of Pembroke Hall, having succeeded Dr. Long in 1770, and retained the headship till 1784. He was appointed joint executor with Mason to Gray's will, and he accompanied Gray's remains to his grave in the churchyard of Stoke. See THE POET Gil AY. 315 the rest (but Dr. May* and the master) are dead or married. LETTER LXXXIV. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. DEAR Mr. MASON, Cambridge, Thursday, 17f>4. As you are alone and not quite well, I do feel a little sort of (I am almost ashamed to speak it) tenderness for you, but then I com- fort myself with the thought that it does not proceed from any remnant of old inclination or kindness that I have for you. That, you must allow, would be folly, as our places of abode are so distant, and our occupations and pur- suits so different. But the true cause is, that I am pretty lonely too, and besides have a com- plaint in my eyes that possibly may end in blindness. It consists in not being able to read at all with one eye, and having very often on him Chatham Correspondence, iv. p. 311 ; Walpole's Misc. Corresp. v. p. 118; vi 94. * Samuel May, elected a Fellow of Pembroke 1740, died in 1787. Mentioned by Gray in his Letters (see Works, vol. iii. pp. 24, 1 19), lull net in a very flattering manner. 31G LETTERS OF the mascce voUtcmtes before the other. I mav be allowed therefore to think a little of you and Delaval, without any disparagement to my knowledge of mankind and of human nature. The match you talk of is no more consum- mated than your own, and Kitty* is still a maid for the Doctor, so that he wants the requisite thing, and yet, I'll he sworn, his hap- piness is very little impaired. I take broiled salmon to be a dish much more necessary at your table than his. I had heard in town (as you have) that they were married ; and longed to go to Spilsby and make them a visit ; but here I learn it is not true yet, whatever it may be. I read and liked the Epigramf as it * Kitty Hunter and Dr. Delap. See a letter from Right Hon. T. Townshend to G. Sehvyn. " Another important event is the marriage of Miss Hunter to a Dr. Delap, with whose sister she boarded. It is said that her father has added two hundred a year to her other settlement." Nov. 11, 1764. See Sehvyn Correspondence, vol. i. p. 319; and Letter lxxvt. of this Correspondence. Her other settlement was that made on her by the Earl of Pembroke. See Walpole's Misc Letters, vol. iv. p. 256. So ends the history of the Rev. Dr. Delap. ■j" I possess several of Mason's political and personal epi- grams, which Walpole used to insert for him in the " Evening Post;" but do not recognise the one here alluded to. Those against the king are written in the bitterest feeling of personal animosity . See « me of Mason's squibs alluded to, in Rockingham Memoirs, \<>1. ii. p. 312; and see Letter xcvi. of this selection. THE POET GBAT. 317 was printed, and do insist it is better without the last lines, not that the thought is amiss, but because the same rhyme is repeated, and the sting is not in the epigrammatic style ; I mean, not easy and familiar. In a satire it might do very well. Mr. Churchill is dead in- deed,* drowned in a butt of claret, which was tapped on the meeting of the Friends at Boulogne. lie made an excellent end, as his executor Humphrey Cotesf testifies. I did not * See on his death Walpole's Letters to Mason, i. p. 207 ; Memoirs of George III., vol. i. p. 181, ii. p.' 35 ; The Gren- ville Papers, vol. ii. p. 459, in a letter from Mr. Almon to Earl Temple. " Although (he writes) Churchill was very much out of humour with the Minority, and intended very soon to have attacked them upon their moderation, in a poem to have been called Moderatus, inscribed to Mr. Pitt, yet his death will be felt as a real loss, for the public admired his writings; and, whatever he might have said of the Minority, he would certainly have said much worse of the Ministry." f A friend of Churchill (brother of Admiral Cotes) and a wine-merchant and political character. He is mentioned in Churchill's Poem, "Independence:" — " Hail, Independence! — never may my lot Till I forget thee, be by thee forgot. Thither, oh thither! oftentimes repair, Cotes, whom thou lovest too, shall meet thee there." Churchill and Humphrey Cotes had gone to Boulogne <>n a visit to Wilkes. Churchill was suddenly attacked with a fever, and died. See a letter from Wilkes to Earl Temple, Nov. 1 , 318 LETTERS OF write any of the elegies, being busy in writing the Temple of Tragedy. Send for it forthwith, for you are highly interested in it. If I had not owned the thing, perhaps you might have gone and taken it for the Reverend. Mr. Lang- horne's. It is divine. I have not read the Philosophic Dictionary. I can stay with great patience for anything that comes from Voltaire. They tell me it is frippery, and blasphemy, and wit. I could have forgiven myself if I had not read Rousseau's Letters. Always excepting the Contract Social, it is the dullest performance he ever published. It is a weak attempt to separate the miracles from the morality of the Gospel. The latter he would have you think he believes was sent from God, and the former he very explicitly takes for an imposture. This is in order to prove the cruelty and injustice of the State of Geneva in burning his Emile.* The latter part of his book is to shew the abuses that have 17G4, written while his two friends were staying with him. See Grenville Papers, ii. p. 454. * " Gray thought the Emile a work of great genius, though mixed with much absurdity ; and that it might be productive of good, if read with judgment, but impracticable and ridicu- lous as a system of education. To adopt it as such, he said, " you must begin a new world." See Works, v. 4G. TILE POET GRAY. 319 crept into the constitution of his country, which point (if you are concerned about it) he makes out very well, and his intention in this is plainly to raise a tumult in the city, and to be revenged on the Petit Conseil, who con- demned his writings to the names. Cambridge itself is fruitful enough of events to furnish out many paragraphs in my Gazette. The most important is, that Frog Walker* is dead ; his last words were (as the nurses sat by him and said, " Ah ! poor gentleman, he is going ! ") ; " Going, going ! where am I going ? I'm sure I know no more * This is Doctor Richard Walker, Fellow and Vice-Master of Trinity CoUege and Professor of Moral Theology from 1744 to 1764; founder of the Botanic Gardens at Cambridge. He is also the person quoted by Pope in the Dunciad (Book iv. 273) as the obsequious attendant on Bentley, " Walker, my hat!" There is an engraving of him by Lainbourne very like him. See some account of him in Cumberland's Memoirs, p. 73, 4to. and Bishop Monk's Life of Bentley, vol. ii. pp. 26, 349, iVc. He was caUed Frog Walker from his having served a curacy in the /e/j-country at Upwell, and so peculiarly dis- tinguished from others of his contemporaries of the same name, " a nickname" says Bishop Monk, " by which he is still desig- nated" The same biographer observes, " His goodly disposi- tion, his liberality and public spirit, and his almost chivalrous devotion to the fortunes of his master (Bentley), have pro- cured him a celebrity in the University annals, to which his talents and acquirements do not seem to have entitled him." 320 LETTERS OF than the man in the moon." Doctor RicUim?- ton* has been given over with a dropsy these ten weeks. He refused all tapping and scari- fying, but obeyed other directions, till, finding all was over, he prescribed to himself a boiled chicken entire, and five quarts of small beer. After this he brought up great quantities of blood, the swelling and suffocation, and all signs of water disappeared, his spirits returned, and, except extreme weakness, he is recovered. Every body has ceased to inquire after him, and, as he would not die when he should, they are resolved to proceed as if he were dead and buried. Dr. iSewcomet is dead. For six weeks or more before his death he was distracted, not childish, but really raving. For the last three weeks he took no nourishment but by force. Miss Kirke and the younger BeadonJ are exe- cutors and residuary legatees. I believe, he * Professor of Civil Law. See Letter xcn. f Dean of Rochester, elected Margaret Professor of Divinity in 1727, Master of St. John's in 173f>, and was succeeded by Zachary Brooke as Margaret Professor, and as Master of St. Johifs by Dr. Powell. See account of him in Nichols's Li- terary Anecdotes, vol. i. p. 558, and viii. p. 379. He died lUth January, 1765, set. 82. Buried in the Chapel of St. John's College. | Richard Beadon, Fellow of St. John's, afterwards Public Orator, Master of Jesus, and Bishop of Gloucester and Bath. THE POET GRAY. 321 left about 10,000/., but there are many lega- cies. Had I a pen of adamant, I could not de- scribe the business, the agitation, the tempest, the University is in about the Margaret Pro- fessorship.* Only D.D.'s and B.D.'s have votes, so that there are acts upon acts. The bell is eternally tolling, as in time of pestilence, and no- body knows whose turn it may be next. The candidates are Dr. Law and Z. Brooke and my Lord Sandwich. The day is Saturday next. But alas ! what is this to the warm region of Saint John's ? It is like Lisbon on the day of the earthquake ; it is like the fire of London. I can hear and smell it hither. Here too ap- pears the furious Zachary; but his forces are but three or four men. Here towers Doctor Rutherforth,t himself an host, and he has about three champions. There Skinner, % with his powerful oratory, and the decent Mr. Alvis,§ * In 1765 Zachary Brooke, of St. John's, was elected Margaret Professor, vacated by Dr. John Newcome's death. He was also Dean of Rochester, and was succeeded in 1788 by J. Mainwaring, D.D. t Dr. Rutherford, Fellow of St. John's and Regius Professor of Divinity. \ John Skynner, Fellow of St. John's, Sub-Dean of York, and Public Orator from 1752 to 1762. He died May 25. 1805, aged 81. See Nichols's Anecdotes, ix. p. 487. § Andrew Alvis, Fellow of St. John's College, Cambridge, Y 322 LETTERS OF with their several invisible squadrons : Ogden and Gunning* each fighting for himself, and disdaining the assistance of others. But see, where Franipton,t with his 17 votes, and on his buckler glitters the formidable name of Sand- wich, at which fiends tremble. Last of all comes, with his mines and countermines, and old Newcastle at his back, the irresistible force of Powell.^ 23 are a majority, and he has al- ready 22-J. If it lapses to the Seniors he has it; if it lapses to the Visitor he has it. In short, as we all believe, he has it every way. I know you are overjoyed, especially for that he has the Newcastle interest. I have had a M.A. 1738. Rector of Great Snoring, Norfolk, 1763 or 1764. Died May 25, 1775. See a Letter from him to Mr. Gough in Nichols's Literary Anecdotes, ix. p. 362. * Probably Stuart Gunning, Fellow of St. John's College in 1745, whose successor, Thomas Doyly, was elected in March 1766. f Thomas Frampton, Fellow of St. John's College, A.M. 1751, B.D. 1759. J William Samuel Powell elected Master of St. John's College in 1764, which he held till 1775. His sermons have received the highest praise from the highest authorities. See Hey's Lectures on Divinity, vol. i. pp. 77, 91 ; ii. p 263, and the Index to the 4th volume, art. " Powell." See also Bishop Maltby's Illustrations of the Christian Religion, p. 261. He died January 19, 1775, aged 58. Cole has given a lonf account of him in Nichols's Anecdotes, vol. i. p. 564-584. THE POET GRAY. 323 verv civil visit of two hours from Archima^e, busy ns he is; for you know I inherit <*ill your old acquaintance, as I do all Delaval's old distempers. I visited Dr. Balgny the other day at Winchester, and he me at Southampton. We are as great as two peas. The day of election at Saint John's is Friday sennight. Mr. Brown is well, and has forgot you. Mr. Nicholls* is profuse of his thanks to me for your civilities to him at York, of which, God knows, I knew no more than the man in the moon. Adieu. LETTER LXXXV. TO THE REV. JAMES BROWN. DEAR SIR, Southampton, Oct. 13, 1764. Since I have heen here, I have received from vou, and hy your means, five letters. That from Pa. I could wish you had opened, as I know you, by your good will, would have done. * The Rev. Norton Nicholls, of Bhmdeston, Suffolk. Mr. Mathias's friendly and elegant memoir of him is well-known, and is reprinted in Gray and Nicholls's Correspondence, ed. Aid. p. 3 to 28. See also on him Walpole's Letter to Mann, ii. pp. 210, 224. He is occasionally mentioned in the Corres- pondence between Walpole and Mason; and my revered friend Mr. Samuel Rogers informs me that he was well acquainted with him. T 2 324 LETTERS OF The sum of it is, that he is at Geneva, with the Rhone tumbling its blue and green tide directly under his window. That he has passed a fortnight in the Pays de Vaud, and the Cantons of Berne, Eribourg, and Soleure, and returned by the lake of Neufckatel. That the whole country, and particularly the last- named, appeared to him astonishingly beauti- ful. He inquired much after Rousseau, but did not meet with him ; his residence is at Moitier au Travers, about four leagues from Neufehatel, where he lives in great plenty, the booksellers at the Hague being his bank, and ready to answer any sum he draws for. It is amazing what he got by his last two books. He is often flying about from village to village ; generally wears a sort of Armenian dress, and passed for a kind of misanthrope, but is held in great veneration by the people. He says, he saw all the matters that come in course in Erance, and was greatly disappointed. The only thing he mentions is the church at Amiens, which was really fine. They set out in a few days (his date is 19th Sept.,) and go by Chambery to Turin, from whence he will write to you. His letter, he says, is not worth the postage ; but it is the abundance and not the want of matter that makes it so poor. THE POET GllAY. 325 After this what shall I say to you of my Lil- liputian travels ? On Monday I think to see Salisbury, and to he sure Wilton, and Ames- hury, and Stonehenge. This will take up three days, and then I come hack hither, and think to he in London on Saturday or Monday after, for the weather grows untoward, and the sea (that is, the little miniature of it, Southampton River) rages horribly, and looks as if it would eat one, else I should have gone to Lyrning- ton and Christchurch, and called upon Mr. Mansfield in the New Forest, to see the bow that killed "William Rufus, which he pretends to possess. Say not a word of Andover. My Lord Delawar has erected a little monument over the spot where, according to ancient tra- dition, that king was slain, and another in Gods House Chapel, where the Earl of Cam- bridge, Lord Scroop, and Sir Thomas Grey, were interred by Henry V. after he had cut off their heads. It is in this town, and now the French Church. Here lives Dr. Saint Andre,* famous for the affair of the Rabbit- * Nathaniel St. Andre, surgeon. See Musgrave's Me- moirs, Gent. Mag. vol. li. p. 320, and Noble's Continuation of Granger, vol. iii. p. 477 ; and Biog. Anecdotes of Hogarth by- Nichols. When Samuel Molyneux, Esq., Secretary to George Prince of Wales, died, St. Andre immediately married his 326 LETTERS OF Woman, and for marrying Lady Betty Moly- nenx after they had disposed of her first hus- band. She died not long since in the odour of sanctity. He is 80 years old, and is now building a palazzino here hard by, in a delight- ful spot called Bellevue, and has lately pro- duced a natural son to inherit it. What do you say to poor I wan,* and the last Russ mani- festo ? "Will nobodv kill me that dra^oness ? Must we wait till her son does it himself ? Mr. Stonhewer has been at Glamis. He tells me no news. He only confutes a piece of news I sent him, which I am glad to hear is a lie. I must tell you a small anecdote I just hear, that delights me. Sir P. Norton f has a mother widow, Elizabeth, daughter of Algernon Capel, Earl of Essex. St Andre was one of the dupes of Mary Tofts, who asserted she was delivered of seventeen rabbits in 1726. Sir Thomas Clarges detected the fraud. Whiston wrote a paper on this rabbit conception, as the fulfilment of a prophecy in Esdras. St. Andre died in March 1776, aged 96. * See Belsham's History, vol. v. p. 127. Walpole's George 111. i. p. 185; ii. p, 34. Lord Chesterfield's Letters, vol. iv. p. 218. See Walpole's Misc. Letters, vol. iv. p. 443. " The murder of the young Czar Iwan has stirred again all my abhorrence of the Czarina. What a devil in a diadem!" &c. f Sir Fletcher Norton, Attorney-General, afterwards Speaker of the House of Commons, and in 17'J2 Lord Grantley. His father was Thomas Norton, of Grantley, near Ripon, who died 1719; and hi- mother was Elizabeth, daughtei of William THE POET GRAY. 327 living at a town in Yorkshire, in a very indif- ferent lodging. A good house was to be sold there the other day. He thought in decency he ought to appear willing to buy it for her. When the people to whom it belongs imagined that everything was agreed on, he insisted on having two pictures as fixtures, which they value at 60/., so Mrs. Norton lives where she did. I am sorry for the Duke of Devonshire.* The cause, I fear, is losing ground, and I know the person (where Mr. T.f has lately been) looked upon all as gone, if this event should happen. Adieu. When I get to town I shall pick up something to tell you. I am ever yours. I know nothing of Mason, but that he is well. Southampton, at Mr. Vining's, plumber, in High Street. Sergeantson, of Hanleth, in Craven. Died 1774; buried in Ripon Minster. * William fourth Duke of Devonshire, died October 2nd, 1764, aged 44, at the German Spa; buried at Allhallows, Derby. Lord Temple wrote to Mr. Mitchell at Berlin in October, 1764. "Vous connoissez assez et vous sentirez de meme tout le malheur de la perte que nous venons d'essayer dans la mort du Due de Devonshire." See Grenville Papers, vol. ii. p. 452; and Rockingham Memoirs, vol. i. p. 134. f Probably Mr. Talbot, Fellow of Pembroke. 328 LETTERS OF LETTER LXXXVI. TO THE REV. JAMES BROWN. DEAR SIR, Monday, 1764. ? I received your letter before I left London, and sit down to write to you, after the finest walk in the finest day that ever shone to Netley Abbey* — my old friend, with whom I longed to renew my acquaintance. My ferryman (for one passes over a little arm of the sea about half a mile) assured me he would not go near it in the night time for all the world, though he knew much money had been found there. The sun was " all too glaring and too full of gauds" for such a scene, which ought to be visited only in the dusk of the evening. It stands in a little quiet valley, which gradually rises behind the ruins into a half-circle crowned with thick wood. Before it, on a descent, is a thicket of oaks, that serves to veil it from the broad day and from profane eyes, only leaving a peep on both sides, where the sea appears glittering through the shade, and ves- sels, with their white sails, that glide across and are lost again. Concealed behind the * Compare Gilpin's description of Netley Abbey, in his Tonr in the Western Parts of England, p. 347. HIE POET GRAY. 321) thicket stands a little castle (also in ruins), immediately on the shore, that commands a view over an expanse of sea clear and smooth as glass (when I saw it), with Southampton and several villages three miles off to the right, Calshot Castle at seven miles' distance, and the high lands of the Isle of "Wight to the left, and in front the deep shades of the New Forest distinctly seen, because the water is no more than three miles over. The abbey was never very large. The shell of its church is almost entire, but the pillars of the aisles are gone, and the roof has tumbled in ; yet some little of it is left in the transept, where the ivy has forced its way through, and hangs flaunting down among the fretted orna- ments and escutcheons of the benefactors. Much of the lodgings and offices are also standing, but all is overgrown with trees and bushes, and mantled here and there with ivy, that mounts over the battlements. In my way" I saw Winchester Cathedral again with pleasure, and supped with Dr. Balguy, who, I perceive, means to govern the chapter. They give 200/. a-year to the poor of the city. His present scheme is to take away this, for it is only an encouragement to laziness. But what do thev mean to do with 330 LETTERS OF it ? That, indeed, I omitted to inquire, because I thought I knew. I saw St. Cross, too, the almshouse of Noble Poverty (so it was called), founded by Henry de Blois and Cardinal Beau- fort. It maintains nine decayed footmen, and a master (Chancellor Hoadly), who has 8001. a-year out of it. This place is still full of bathers. I know not a soul, nor have once been at the rooms. The walks all round it are delicious, and so is the weather. Lodgings very dear, and fish very cheap. Here is no coffee-house, no book- seller, no pastrycook ; but here is the Duke of Chandos.* I defer my politics. My service to Mr. Talbot, Gould, f &c, and to Mr. Howe, if with you. Adieu. * Henry Brydges, second Duke of Chandos, succeeded 1744; died 1771. f Mr. Theodore Vine Gould, Fellow of New Hall, A.M. 1760. Mr. Thomas Talbot, of Queen's College, A.M. 1764. William Taylor Howe, of Pembroke College, A.B. 1760. THE POET GRAY. 331 LETTER LXXXVIL TO THE REV. JAMES BROWN. Jermyn Street, DEAR Sill, Thursday, October 25, 1764. I am returned from Southampton, since Monday last ; have been at Salisbury, Wilton, Stonehenge, and where not, and am not at all the worse for my expedition. Delly* has been here, and talks of going to Cambridge on Wednesday, if you want him ; but, if you do not, would be glad to be prevented by a letter. His intention is only to stay there a day or two. He asked me for my rooms, but as I had (intentionally) promised them to Mr. Mapletoft, I answered as if I had actually been engaged on that head, and had already wrote to you to say so. If Mr. Mapletoft t does not come, they are at Mr. Delly' s service. The present news is that Lady Harriet Went- worthj' (Lord Rockingham's sister), not a young or a beautiful maiden, has married her servant, an Irish footman. Mr. Mason, who has been in Yorkshire, has seen the future bride. She has just such a * Delaval, Fellow of Pembroke, mentioned before. f John Mapletoft, of Pembroke College, A.M. 1761. t Sec P . 335. 332 LETTERS or nose as Mason has himself; so yon see it was made in heaven. The rent-roll of the present Dnke of Devon- shire's estate is 44,000Z. a-year. Lord Richard has hetter than 4,000/. a-year; Lady Dorothy 30,000/.; a legacy of 500/. to General Conway;* 500Z. apiece to the three brothers, and they are appointed guardians, and, I think, executors — business enough, in conscience. To-day I hear the Cambridge affair is compromised, and Lord Hardwicke to come in quietly, f This I should * Honourable Seymour Conway, only brother of the Earl of Hertford, Groom of the Bedchamber, dismissed 1764 (April) from Court, and his regiment taken away, on account of his opposition to Government on the question of General Warrants. He was considered an upright and respectable Minister, but had few opportunities of evincing military talent. Field-Marshal 1793 ; died 1795. He had been employed in the unsuccessful expedition against Kochfort. A comedy, said to have been written by him, called " False Appearances, 1 ' afterwards taking the title of " Fashionable Friends," found among Lord Orford's Papers, was acted at Strawberry Hill. He is now best known through his inti- macy with Horace Walpole. f See Walpole's Miscellaneous Letters, vol. iv. pp. 325, 3S5, and 401, and Churchill's Candidate, p. 30. Are there not proctors faithful to thy will, One of full growth, others in embryo still, Who may, perhaps, in some ten years or more, Be ascertained that two and two make four ? &c. THE POET GRAY. 333 not give credit to had I not heard it before I came from thence. The Duke of Cumberland, they say, is in a very good way : it is strange to me if he recovers. I will write soon again, and try to tell you more, for I shall stay in town about a fortnight longer. You will oblige me if you will send to inquire how Dolly Antrobus does. Adieu. I am ever yours, On which I find the following MS. note in Gray's copy of Churchill : " When Lord Sandwich stood for the High Steward- ship of Cambridge, the proctors could not agree whether he or the Earl of Hardwicke had the majority of voices." See Gray's Letters, vol. iv. p. 47, to Dr. Wharton. " Your mother, the University, has succeeded in her great cause against the party of State; Lord Hardwicke is declared duly elected, by a majo- rity of one voice," &c. And see Dr. King's Anecdotes of his own Time, p. 161, and Mr. Grenvilles Diary, vol. ii. p. 236, Grenville Papers. " The King wished Lord Sandwich to give up the pursuit, dislikes his activity, and does not approve of the factions of great lords making parties for themselves. See p. 494. Mr. Nicholls tells us, that in the contest for the High Stewardship at Cambridge, between Lord Hardwicke and Lord Sandwich, Mr. Gray took a warm and eager part, for no other reason, I believe, than because he thought the licentious cha- racter of the latter candidate rendered him improper for a post of such dignity in the University. See Gray's Works, ed. Aid. vol. v. p. 37. 334 LETTERS OE LETTER LXXXVIII. TO THE REV. JAMES BROWN. DEAR SIR, Monday, Oct. 29, 1764. I was not able to answer your letter on Saturday, but Delly* will certainly be with you on Wednesday, good man. The Duke of Devonshiref for the last fortnight of his life was in a state of infancy. On opening his head there were found two fleshy substances that pressed upon the brain — the source of his malady. He leaves Devonshire House, with the pictures, furniture, &c, to Lord Richard, his second son, which the present duke may redeem by paying down 20,000/. ; in short, to Lord Richard and Lord George (for there are * Delaval. f On the Duke of Devonshire's death, Oct. 2, 1764, aged 44, at Spa, see the Grenville Papers, ii. pp. 22, 441. Walpole's Misc. Letters, iv. 238, 435. Selwyn Correspondence, i. pp. 286, 291. Walpole's History of George III. vol. i. pp. 71, 202; vol. ii. pp. 20, 100, 111. Rockingham Papers, i. 137. Bel- sham's History, iv. p. 305. This nobleman was much lamented. He was the son of him who was called " the good old Duke of Devonshire," who died in 1755. See his character in Collins's Peerage, i. 357. Lord Mahon's Hist. vol. v. p. 89, for his character. On his resignation Oct. 28, in 1762, see Lord Million's Hist. v. App. iii. from the Grafton MSS. THE POET GRAY. 335 two) he gives about 4,000Z. a-year apiece ; the rest I think I told you before. The majority do not exult upon this death ; they are modest and humble, being all together by the ears ; so, indeed are the minority too. I hear nothing about the Cambridge affair, and you do not tell me whether my last news was true ; I conclude not, for I am told the Yorkes arc very fully and explicitly against the present measures — even their chief himself. The present talk runs on Lady Harriet Went- worth* (that is her name since she married her Irish footman). Your friend the Marquis of Rockingham's sister is a sensible, well-educated woman; twenty-seven years old, indeed, and homely enough. O'Brien and his ladyf (big with child) are embarked for America, to culti- vate their 40,000 acres of woodland. Before * Lord Rockingham's sister, Lady Henrietta Olivia Went- worth, married Mr. William Sturgeon. She was born 1737. See Walpole's Misc. Letters, iv. p. 4G0, and Sehvyn Corre- spondence, vol. i. p. 312-315. | " O'Brien and Lady Susan are to be transported to the Ohio and have a grant of 40,000 acres. The Duchess of Grafton says 60,000 was bestowed ; but a friend of yours and a relation of Lady Susan nibbled away 20,000 from the captain." Walpole to Lord Hertford, iv. 404 and 440, and Lord Holland to Mr. Grenville, Oct. 14, 1704, on the same subject. See Grenville Papers, ii. p. 447. 33G LETTERS OF they went, her uncle made him enter himself at Lincoln's Inn ; I suppose to give him the idea of returning home again.* I hope not to stay here ahove a fortnight, but in the meantime should be glad if you would inform me what is the sum total of my bill. Adieu. I am ever yours, As I have room, I shall tell you that, on the news of the Duke of Cumberland's illness at * Lady Susan Fox, Lord Tlchester's daughter, married O'Brien, the actor. Lord Holland, in a letter to Mr. Gren- ville, says, " Mr. O'Brien is gone with her to New York, and the keeping him there in credit is all that can be done, whilst we, if possible, forget them here." He then asks for a place of Comptroller of the Customs for him at New York, and says, " The King has shown much compassion on this un- fortunate occasion." See Grenville Papers, vol. ii. 447. See also a letter from H. Walpole to Lord Hertford, in Misc. Corr. iv. p. 404, and Letters to Mann, i. p. 195. "A melancholy affair has happened to Lord Ilchester. His eldest daughter, Lady Susan, a very pleasing girl, though not handsome, married herself two days ago, at Covent Garden Church, to O'Brien, a handsome young actor. Lord Ilchester doted on her, and was the most indulgent of fathers. It was a cruel blow." See also J. Taylor's Records of his own Life, vol. i. p. 17G, for some interesting account of the character and talents of Mr. O'Brien ; and see Selwyn Correspondence, vol. i. 273. THE POET GRAY. 337 Newmarket, Lord S. coming out of the closet met a great butcherly lord with a white staff,* and, with a countenance very decent and com- posed to sorrow, told him they had extreme bad news ; that his Boyal Highness the Duke was so ill it was doubtful whether he could live till next day.f The other replied, " Bad news, do you call it ? By God, I am very glad of it, and shall l)e to hear the same of all that do not love the Kin^." My service to Mr. T.| I am glad to hear he is well. LETTER LXXXIX. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. DEAR MASON, Jermyn Street, May 23, [1765 ?] In my way into the remote parts of the north, I mean to make you a visit at York ; probably you will see me there on Wednesday next in the evening. It is your business to consider whether you have a house and a tea for me, for I shall stay there a week perhaps, if you con- * Lord Talbot, Lord Steward. Lord S. is probably Lord Sandwich, the Secretary of State. f He died in Upper Grosvenor Street, 31st October, 1765. \ Mr. Talbot. Z 338 LETTERS OF tinue agreeable so long. I have been in town this month, every day teeming with prodigies. I suppose yon receive expresses every three hours, and therefore I pass over the Regency Bill, the weavers' petition, the siege of Bedford House,* the riot on Lndgate Hill, the royal embassy to Hayes, f the carte blanche refused * For an account of these riots in 1765 see Cavendish Debates, pp. 147, 310, and Notes of the Editor; Walpole's Memoir of George the Third, vol. ii. p. 155 ; Walpole's Mis- cellaneous Letters, vol. v. p. 35. See also the Eockingham Memoirs, vol. i. p. 207. " Bedford House was completely- besieged by the rioters, who could only be repelled by a body of cavalry. The cause of the Duke of Bedford's being the principal object of the attack of the rioters, was owing to his being foremost in opposing the altering the duties on Italian silks, so as to obtain a total prohibition of them. The silk manufacture at that time in Spitalfields was at a low ebb, and it required near another century before the advantage of free- dom of trade was understood and adopted." t On this embassy to Lord Chatham, at his seat at Hayes, near Bromley, see Walpole's History of George the Third, vol. i. p. 288 ; Belsham's History, vol. v. p. 94 ; Adolphus's History, vol. i. p. 127; Lord Mahon's History, vol. v. pp. 55— 59. See also Lord Hardwicke's Letter to Lord Eoyston, in his Life by Harris, vol. iii. p. 375-380. The grounds of this favourite seat of Lord Chatham, which he sold to a Mr. Wal- pole on his coming into possession of Burton Pynsent, and then anxiously repurchased, were laid out by him ; the little lake and the Palladian bridge still remain. In this house he died, and in this house his second son, William Pitt, was born. Visited by me July, 1851. THE POET GRAY. 339 with disdain, the subversion of the ministry, which fights to the last gasp, and afterwards like the man che combattea e era morto, and yet stands upon its legs and spits in its master's face to this day because nobody will deign to take its place ; the House of Commons stand- ing at gaze with its hands before it ; the Honse of Lords bullying the justices of peace and fining the printers ;* the king , &c. &c. The rest is left to oral tradition. Adieu ! LETTER XC. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. July 1G, 1765. William Shakespeare to Mrs. Anne, Regular Servant to the Rev. Mr. Precentor, of York. A moment's patience, gentle Mistris Anne: (But stint your clack for sweet St. Charitie) 'Tis Willey begs, once a right proper man, Thougli now a book, and interleav'd you see. Much have I borne from canker'd critic's spite, From fumbling baronets, and poets small, Pert barristers, and parsons nothing bright : * This alludes to the proceedings in the case of Wilkes. Almon was Wilkes's printer. z 2 340 LETTERS OF But what awaits me now is worst of all. 'Tis true, our master's temper natural Was fashion'd fair in meek and dove-like guise ; But may not honey's self be turn'd to gall By residence, by marriage, and sore eyes ? If then he wreak on me his wicked will, Steal to his closet at the hour of prayer ; And (when thou hear'st the organ piping shrill) Grease his best pen, and all he scribbles, tear. Better to bottom tarts and cheesecakes nice, Better the roast meat from the fire to save, Better be twisted into caps for spice, Than thus be patch 'd and cobbled in one's grave. So York shall taste what Clouet never knew, So from our works sublimer fumes shall rise : While Nancy earns the praise to Shakespeare due, For glorious puddings, and immortal pies. ■ Tell me if you do not like this, and I will send you a worse. I rejoice to hear your eyes are better, as much as if they were my own ; but the cure will never be lasting without a little sea. I have been for two days at Hartle- pool to taste the waters, and do assure you nothing can be Salter, and bitterer, and nastier, and better for you. They have a most anti- scorbutic flavour. I am delighted with the place. There are the finest walks, and rocks, and caverns, and dried fishes, and all manner of small inconveniences a man can wish. I am going again this week, so wait your commands. THE POET GRAY. 3 11 Dr. Wharton would be quite happy to see you at Old Park. If you should have kindness and resignation enough to come, you must get to Darlington, then turn off the great road to Merrington, then inquire the way to Spenny- moor House, where they will direct you hither. Adieu, I am ever yours, T. G. LETTER XCI. REV. WILLIAM MASON TO GRAY. DEAR Mr. GRAY, Aston, July 22nd, 1765. As had as your verses were they are yours, and, therefore, when I get hack to York I will jiaste them carefully in the first page of my Shakespeare to enhance its value, for I intend it to be put in my marriage settlement as a provision for my younger daughters. My eldest boy is to be provided for out of Hutton's* nose, and I have just now writ to Stonhewer to get a reversionary grant of a commission of hawkers and pedlars for my second son. When this * Gray writes, in 1768, " Mr. Hutton being dead, Mason has now a landed estate, the income of which, in a few years, will be considerable." Works, v. p. 74. 342 LETTERS OF matter is settled I hope soon to be in posses- sion of my gentle Argentile;* for really and sin- cerely I have seen her, got her consent, have written to her father, and letters now every post relative to her jointure. After all, I verily believe it will not do, and am at present much out of sorts about it ; and, was it not that I love her more than ever, should wish I had been soused head and ears at Hartlepool before I had ventured to make my proposals. But no more of this; you will not pity me now, no more than you did when I was in residence and sore eves. I am here about the commission concerning my exchange of glebe, which I hope to finish next Wednesday ; after which I shall go soon either to Hull or York, unless Lord Holder- nesse stops me by coming here next week, which, though he talks of doing, I fancy he will not. I know nothing of politics, except from a letter of Eraser's ; that he is taken from Lord Northumberland by the Duke of Grafton, and is just where he was four years ago with Lord * Mason, in calling his bride " gentle Argentile," alludes to his play of Argentile and Curan, a / legendary drama, written about this time. Argentile was the daughter of king Adel- bright. See his Works, vol. ii. p. 208. THE POET GRAY. 343 Holdornessc. Poor fellow ! I pity liim ; but I hope Stonhcwer will be good to him, for he is a worthy creature. I have no belief, however, in the duration of this ministry, unless Mr. Pitt* adds himself to it, which I fancy he will hardly do. You will be very cross I know at this letter, since it will tell you that I shall not come to Hartlepool; for I know you want somebody that you may frump and scold, and say sharp things to ; and my dove-like temper would be nothing in the world for you after a gulp of sea water. However, my eyes are now perfectly well, that I lau£jh at the scurvy. I direct this to Dr. Wharton's on supposition that you are tired of Hartlepool. Give my best compliments to the Dr.f and his lady, and be- lieve me to be, as much as I can be any body's at present, Yours most sincerely, W. Mason. * On tlie Administration in 1765, Lord Chesterfield says, " The keystone must and will be Mr. Pitt." See Letters, iv. pp. 260-1. Adolphus's History, vol. i. chap. ix. p. 232. Belsham's History, b. xiv. p. 103. f Doctor Wharton. 3iL LETTERS OF LETTER XCII. TO THE REV. JAMES BROWN. DEAR SlR, Old Park, Thursday, Aug. 1765. It is true I have been lately a very indifferent correspondent, but poverty knows no law, and must be my excuse. Since the fortnight I passed with Mason at York (who was then very bad with that troublesome denuxion in his eyes, and is since cured, and now stands on the brink of marriage), I have been always resi- dent at Old Park, excursions excepted of a day or two at a time, and one lately of three weeks • to Hartlepool. The rocks, the sea, and the Aveather there more than made up to me the want of bread and the want of water, two capi- tal defects, but of which I learned from the inhabitants not to be sensible. They live on the refuse of their own fish-market, with a few potatoes, and a reasonable quantity of geneva, six days in the week, and I have nowhere seen a taller, more robust, or healthy race; every house full of ruddv broad-faced children ; no- body dies but of drowning or old age; nobody poor but from drunkenness or mere laziness. I had long wished for a storm, and was treated THE POET GRAY. 3 1)5 before I came away with sucli a one as July- could produce ; but the waves did not rise above twelve feet high, and there was no hurt done. On Monday (I believe) I go to Scot- land with my lord,* and Tom and the Major. No ladies are of the party, they remain at Hctton ;f yet I do not expect to see anything, for we go post till I come to Glands. I hear of Palgrave's safe arrival in England. Pray, congratulate him from me, and beg he would not give away all his pictures and gems till I come. I hope to see him in October. Is it true that younsj Tyrrell does not go into orders ? Dr. Hallifax (who was here with Dr. Lowth) tells me, that Eidlington % is on his way to Nice. The last letter you sent me was from Mr. Ramsev, a tenant of mine in Cornhill, who wants to see me anent particular business. As I know not what it is I go with a little uneasi- * Lord Strathinore and Thomas Lyon. Gray writes to Dr. Wharton: " Being just returned from an excursion which I end the Major have been making into the Highlands," &c. vol. iv. p. 51. f See Letter c. A seat of Lord Strathmore's, in Durham, near Eainton. \ Dr. William Eidlington, of Trinity Hall, Professor of Civil Law, 1757; tutor of the College in 1766; died in 1770; succeeded in his Professorship by Dr. Halifax. See Gray and Nicholls Correspondence, p. 65; and note, p. 188. 346 LETTERS or ness on my mind farther north. But what can one do ? I have told him my situation. The Doctor and Mrs. Wharton wish for you often, though in vain ; such is your perverse- ness. Adieu ; I will write again from Scot- land more at large. I am, ever sincerely yours, T. G. Are you not glad for Stonhewer ? I have heard twice from him, hut it is sub sigillo. LETTER XCIII. TO THE REV. JAMES BROWN. DEAR SIR, London, Tuesday night, 1765. I hope to be with you by Thursday or Friday se'nnight. You will hardly go before that time out of college ; but if you do, the writings will be as safe in your drawers as in mine. You have heard so much news from the party that were going to Scotland, that it would be a vain thing for me to talk about it. I can only add, that you will shortly hear, I think, of a great change of affairs, which, whenever I come to town, always follows. To-day I met with a report that Mr. Pitt lies dangerously ill ; but I THE POET GRAY. 347 hope, and rather believe, it is not true. When he is gone all is gone, and England will be old England again, such as, before his administra- tion, it always was ever since we were born. I Avent to-day to Becket's to look at the last volume of Seba.* It comes unbound to four guineas and a half, and contains all the in- sects of that collection (which are exceedingly numerous), and some plates of fossils. The graving, as usual, very unequal, and the de- scriptions as poor as ever. As you have the rest, I conclude you must have this, which completes the work, and contains the index. Are you not glad of the Carlislef history? Walking yesterday in the Windsor Park, I met the brother of the disgraced party, and walked * Locupletissimi Rerum Naturalium Thesauri accurata Descriptio, &c, digessit, descripsit, depingendarum curavit Albertus Seba. 4 vols. fol. Amst. 1734—1765. f This is an allusion to the well-known duel between Lord Byron and Mr. Chaworth, in which the latter was killed. See on it Walpole's Misc. Letters, i. 45, iv. 492, v. 20; Letters to Mann, vol. i. pp. 195, 226 ; Selwyn Correspondence, i. 355, iii. 49; and Walpole's Mem. of George III., ii. p. 50. Isabelle, only sister of Lord Byron, was the wife of the 4th Earl of Carlisle. " I feel for both families," says Horace Walpole, " though I know none of either, but ■poor Lady Carlisle, whom I am sure you will pity." This was William, fifth Lord Byron, born 1722, died 1798. 348 LETTERS OP two hours with him. I had a vast inclination to wish him joy, but did not dare. Adieu. I am ever yours, LETTER XCIV. TO THE REV. W. MASON. Dear Mason, 1705. Res est sacra miser (says the poet), but I say it is the happy man that is the sacred thing, and therefore let the profane keep their dis- tance. He is one of Lucretius' gods, supremely blessed in the contemplation of his own felicity, and what has he to do with worshippers ? This, mind, is the first reason why I did not come to York : the second is, that I do not love con- finement, and probably by next summer may be permitted to touch whom, and where, and with what I think fit, without giving you any offence : the third and last, and not the least perhaps, is, that the finances were at so low an ebb that I could not exactly do what I wished, but was obliged to come the shortest road to town and recruit them. I do not justly know what your taste in reasons may be, since you altered your condition, but there is the in- THE POET GRAY. 349 genious, the petulant, and the dull ; for you any one would have done, for in iny conscience I do not believe you care a halfpenny for reasons at present ; so God bless ye both, and give ye all ye wish, when ye are restored to the use of your wishes. I am returned from Scotland* charmed with my expedition ; it is of the Highlands I speak ; the Lowlands are worth seeing once, but the mountains are ecstatic, and ought to be visited in pilgrimage once a year. None but those monstrous creatures of God know how to join so much beauty with so much horror. A fig for your poets, painters, gardeners, and clergy- men, that have not been among them; their imagination can be made up of nothing but bowling-greens, flowering shrubs, horse-ponds, Fleet-ditches, shell-grottoes, and Chinese rails. Then I had so beautiful an autumn, Italv could hardly produce a nobler scene, and this so sweetly contrasted with that perfection of nasti- ness, and total want of accommodation, that Scotland only can supply. Oh, you would have blessed yourself. I shall certainly go again ; what a pity it is I cannot draw, nor describe, nor ride on horseback. * See a long and interesting letter from Gray to Dr. Whar- ton, describing his visit to Scotland, cxxxi., Works, vol. iv. p. 51. 350 LETTERS OF Stonhewer is the busiest creature upon earth except Mr. Praser ; they stand pretty tight, for all his Royal Highness.* Have you read (oh no, I had forgot) Dr. Lowth's pamphlet f against * This probably relates to the death of the Duke of Cum- berland, who was understood to have formed the present administration, and to constitute great part of its strength. ( Mason.) f On this celebrated Letter of Dr. Lowth, among other books that may be referred to, are the Monthly Beview, 1765, vol. ii. p. 369; Nichols's Illustrations of Literature, iii. 711- 714; viii. 407; Nichols's Anecdotes, vol. i. p. 637, ii. 455, iv. 334; Dr. Parr's Warburtonian Tracts, p. 182. It was the cause of so many other letters from the friends and advocates of either party, that my copy of this little pam- phlet has swelled by such additions into two octavo volumes. It is with pleasure that we know these two very eminent men were subsequently reconciled, though some little doubt is supposed to hang on the subject; on which point see Mr. Peter Hall's Memoir of Lowth, pp. 28, 29, Avho, I think, is justified in his conclusion concerning the incorrectness of the anecdote given in the Parriana by Mr. Barker. Surely Warburton, with all his coarseness of language, would not have ranked Lowth among " the scavengers of literature ; " and the whole weight of the anecdote related, depends on his glancing his eye on Loivth as he spoke in a public room. Dr. Parr says, " Warburton's setting lustre was viewed with nobler feelings than those of mere forgiveness, by the amiable and venerable Dr. Lowth." " Alcenside" Dr. Warton informs his brother, " thought highly of Lowth's letter, but that he had been coarse in places. Lord Lyttelton seemed to admit that Lowth had gutted the letters and given the substance, but not THE POET GRAY. 351 your uncle the Bishop ? Oh, how he works him. I hear he will soon be on the same bench. To- day Mr. Hurd came to see me, but we had not a word of that matter ; he is grown pure and plump, just of the proper breadth for a cele- brated town-preacher. There was Dr. Balguy too : he says Mrs. Mason is very handsome, so you are his friend for ever. Lord Newnham, I hear, has ill health of late : it is a nervous case, so have a care : how do your eyes do? Adieu : my respects to the bride. I would kiss her, but you stand by and pretend it is not the fashion, though I know they do so at TIull. I am, ever yours, T. G. LETTER XCV. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. DEAR MASON,* Pembroke Hall, Saturday, 1765. I rejoice; but has she common sense ? Is she a gentlewoman ? Has she money ? Has she a the real correspondence." Garrick was furious about publishing them. See WoolTs Life of Dr. Warton, p. 312. * Mason married on the 25th of September, 1765, the daughter of William Sherman, Esq., of Hull, -who died at Bristol, March 27, 1767. " Ah ! amantissima, optima, foemina vale!" was a note written by Mason, which I found among his manuscripts. 352 LETTERS or nose ? I know she sings a little, and. twiddles on the harpsichord, hammers at sentiment, and pnts herself in an attitude, admires a cast in the eye, and can say Elfrida hy heart. But these are only the virtues of a maid. Do let her have some wifelike qualities, and a double por- tion of prudence, as she will have not only her- self to govern, but you also, and that with an absolute sway. Your friends, I doubt not, will suffer for it. However, we are very happy, and have no other wish than to see you settled in the world. We beg you would not stand fiddling about it, but be married forthwith, and then take chaise, and come * * * * all the way to Cambridge to be touched by Mr. Brown, and so to London, where, to be sure, she must pass the first winter. If good reasons (and not your own nor her coquetry) forbid this, yet come hither yourself, for our copuses and Welsh rabbits are impatient for you. I sent your letter to Algarotti directly. My Coserella came a long while ago, from Mr. Holies, I suppose, who sent me, without a name, a set of his engravings, when I was last in town ; which, I reckon, is what you mean by your fine presents. The Congresso di Ci- tera was not one of the books. That was my mistake. I like his treatises very well. THE POET GRAY. 353 I hope in God the dedicatorial sonnet has not staid for me. I object nothing to the second line, but like it the better for Milton, and with him too I would read m penult, (give me a shilling) " his ghastly smile,"* &c. But if you won't put it in, then read " wonted smile," and a little before " secure from envy." I see nothing to alter. What I said was the best line is the best line still. Do come hither, and I will read and criticise " your amorous ditties all a winter's day." Adieu, I am truly yours. I hope her hair is not red though. I have been abroad, or I had wrote sooner. LETTER XCVL TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. Dear Mason, I rejoice to find you are both in health, and that one or other of you at least can have your teeming time : you are wise as a serpent, but the devil of a dove, in timing both your satire and your compliments. When a man stands * A jocose allusion to what Gray, in another place, calls Lord Holdernesse's ugly face. 2 A 35 I LETTERS OE on the verv verge of dissolution, with all his unblushing honours thick upon hhn ; when the gout has nipped him in the hud and blasted all his hopes at least for one winter, then come you buzzing about his nose, and strike your sting deep into the reddest, angriest part of his toe, which will surely mortify.* When another has been weak enough in the plenitude of power to disarm himself of his popularity, and to con- ciliate a court that naturally hates him, submits to be decked in their trappings and fondle their lap-dogs, then come you to lull him with your gentlest hum, recalling his good deeds, and hoping what I (with all my old partialities) scarce should dare to hope, if I had but any one else to put my trust in. Let you alone, where spite and interest are in view : ay, ay, Mrs. M. (I see) will be a bishopess. Well, I transcribed your wickedness in a print hand, and sent it by last Sunday's post to Dr. Gisborne, with your orders about it, for I had heard St.t say that he hoped for a month's respite to go into the North, and did not know but he might be gone. G. was to send me word he had received it, but has not * Lord Chatham ; a few months seemed to restore him to all his popularity, as was evinced by the King's visit to the City. f Mr. Stonhewer. THE POET GRAY. 355 yet done so, and (Lord bless me) who knows but he may be gone into Derbyshire, and the Ode gone after 1dm ; if so, mind I am innocent, and meant for the best. I liked it vastly, and thought it very well turned and easy, especially the diabolical part of it. I fear it will not keep, and would have wished the public might have eat it fresh; but, if any untoward accident should delay it, it will be still better than most things that appear at their table. I shall finish where you begun, with my apology. You say you have neglected me, and (to make it relish the better) with many others : for my part I have not neglected you, but I have always considered the happy, that is, new- married people, as too sacred or too profane a thing to be approached by me ; when the year is over, I have no longer any respect or aver- sion for them. Adieu : I am in no spirits, and perplexed besides with many little cares, but always Sincerely yours, T. G. P.S. — My best respects to Madam in her grogram gown. I have long since heard that you were out of pain with regard to her health. Mr. Brown is gone to see his brother near Margate. 2 A 2 356 LETTERS OF LETTER XCVII. TO THE REV. JAMES BROWN. DEAR SIR, Jermyn Street, 15 May, 1766. To-morrow morning I set out for Canterbury. If any letter comes, I believe it will be better to direct to me as usual at Mr. Roberts's bere, and be will take care to send it. I know not bow long my stay in Kent may be : it depends on tbe agreeability of Mr. Robinson and bis wife. You expect to bear wbo is Secretary of State. I cannot tell.* It is sure this morning it was not determined ; perhaps Lord Egmont ; per- haps Lord Hardwicke (for I do not believe be has refused, as is said) ; f perhaps you may hear * May 23rd, 1766, Charles Duke of Richmond appointed Secretary of State, vice the Duke of Grafton. Succeeded August 2, by the Earl of Shelburne. See Walpole's Memoirs of George III. vol. ii. p. 324, who says, " I resolved to try to make the Duke of Richmond Secretary of State; Lord Hardwicke (the second Lord) declined the offer." Wal- pole describes the latter as " a bookish man, conversant only with parsons, ignorant of the world and void of all breeding, was as poor a choice as could be made." See Adolphus's History, vol. i. p. 224. Walpole's Misc. Letters, v. p. 148. f See Lord Hardwicke's letter to his brother, dated 1 4 May, on the offer of the seals made to him; and another, 15 May, declining the offer. THE POET GRAY. 357 of three instead of two. Charles Townshend affirms he has rejected both that office and a peerage ; doubtless from his firm adherence to Mr. Pitt — a name which the court, I mean Lord Tt., Lord Nd., and even Lord B. # himself, at present affect to celebrate, with what design you are to judge. You have doubtless heard of the honour done to your friend Mrs. Macaulay.f Mr. Pitt has made a panegyric of her History in the house. $ It is very true Wilkes has arrived. The tumults in Spain spread wider and wider, while at Naples they are publicly thanking God * Lord Talbot, Lord Northumberland, Lord Bute. On Lord Talbot, see Lord Mahon's History, v. p. 29; Rocking- ham Papers, i p. 172; Grenville Papers, i. 421. Lord Talbot was a Court favourite. See also Walpole's Letters to Mann, voi. i. p. 20-23 ; Walpole's Memoirs of George the Third, vol. i. pp. 74, 81. The Earl of Northumberlaud (Sir H. J. Percy) married Lord Bute's daughter. See Walpole's History of George IH. vol. i p. 419 ; ii. p. 41. He was also a favourite. f Professor Smyth, in his Lectures on Modern History, designates Mrs. Macaulay's History, " as very laborious and unfavourable to Charles I." vol. i. p. 15. " When any doubt is entertained of the conduct of Charles, Mrs. Macaulay may be referred to, and a charge against him, if it can possibly be made out, will assiiredly be found, and supported with all the references that the most animated eloquence can supply." Ibid p. 407. X No account of this panegyric appears in Thackeray's Life of Lord Chatham. 358 LETTERS OF for their cessation ; perhaps you may hear. All is not well in Ireland. It is very late at night. Adieu. Pa. went home to-day, and Mr. "Weddell with him. J. Wheeler has returned from Lisbon. The great match will not be till after Christmas. Tom* is gone to Scotland. It is sure the lady did refuse both Lord Mountstuart and the Duke of Beaufort. f Good night. I came away in debt to you for two post- chaises. Pray set it down. * This is Lyon. | " Lord Mountstuart going to be married to one of the Miss Windsors." See Walpole's George ILL p. 87. See also Lord Chesterfield's Letters, iv. p. 27C. " These two sisters are more sought for their money than for their beauty." The Duke of Beaufort married June 6th, 1766, Elizabeth, youngest daughter of Admiral Boscawen. Francis Viscount Beauchamp (second Marquis of Hertford) married 1 February, 1768, Alicia, second daughter of Viscount Windsor. Horace Wal- pole, in a letter to George Montague, says, " Lord Beauchamp is going to marry the second Miss Windsor. It is odd that these two ugly girls should get the two best figures in England, him and Lord Mountstuart." See Misc. Letters, v. 175, and Selwyn Correspondence, ii. p. 92. " There is," says a moralist, " no better scale by which to judge of the low code of morality adopted by society than their indulgent view of mercenary marriages." THE POET GRAY. 359 LETTER XCVIII. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. Dear Mason, p. Hall, 5th Oct. 1766. I was going to write to you when I received your letter, and on the same subject. The first news I had was from Stonhewer on the 23rd September, in these words : " This morning Dr. Brown dispatched himself. He had been for several days past very low-spirited, and within the last two or three talked of the necessity of dying, in such a manner as to alarm the people about him. They removed, as they thought, every thing that might serve his purpose ; but he had contrived to get at a razor unknown to them, and took the advantage of a minute's absence of his servants to make use of it." I wrote to lrhn again (I suspect he knows our secret, though not from me) to make farther inquiries, and he says, 27th September, " I have tried to find out whether there was any appearance or cause of discontent in Brown,* but can hear of none. A bodily complaint of the gouty kind, that fell upon the nerves and affected his spirits * Iu addition to the former note on Letter xvn. see Wal- pole's Misc. Letters, hi. 90 ; Index to Nichols's Literary Anec- dotes, under " Brown, Dr. John." 360 LETTERS OF in a very great degree, is all that I can get any information of ; and I am told besides, that he was some years ago in the same dejected way, and under the care of proper attendants." Mr. W.* too, in answer to a letter I had written to inquire after his health, after giving an account of himself while under the care of Pringle, adds, " He (Pringle) had another patient at the same time, who has ended very unhappily — that poor Dr. Brown. The unfortunate man apprehended himself going mad, and two nights after cut his throat in bed."f This is all I know at present of the matter. I have told it you literally, and I conceal nothing. As I go to town to-morrow, if I learn anything more you shall soon hear from me ; in the mean time, I think we may fairly conclude that, if he had had any other cause added to his constitutional infirmity, it would » * Horace Walpole. f Lady Hervey's Letters, p. 229 ; Lord Chesterfield's Letters, iv. 275; Hey's Lectures on Divinity, i. p. 454; Life of Lord Lyttelton, by Phillimore, p. 511. But the passage which throws most light on the somewhat mysterious circum- stances attending Mr. Brown's death, is to be found in Nichols's Illustrations of Literature of the Eighteenth Century, vol. iii. p. 715-718, taken from a letter by Mr. Archdeacon Black- burne to the printer of the St. James's Chronicle, 1766, which, being too long for a note, is printed at the end of this Corre- spondence, in an Appendix, No. 1. TILE POET GRAY. 361 have been uppermost in his mind. lie would have talked or raved about it, and the first thing we should have heard of would have been this, which, I do assure you, I have never heard from anybody. There is in this neighbourhood a Mr. Wall, who once was in the Russian trade, and married a woman of that country. He always maintained that Dr. Brown would never go thither, whatever he might pretend, and that, though fond of the glory of being invited thither, he would certainly find or make a pretence for staying at home ; very possibly, therefore, he might have engaged himself so far that he knew not how to draw back with honour, or might have received rough words from the Russian minister, offended with his prevarication. This supposition is at least as likely as yours, added to what I have said before ; much more so, if it be necessary to suppose any other cause than the lunatic disposition of the man ; and yet I will not disguise to you that I felt as you do on the first news of this sad accident, and had the same uneasy ideas about it. I am sorry the cause you mention should be the occasion of your coming to London, though, perhaps, change of air may do more than medi- cine. In this length of time I should think you must be fully apprised whether her looks, 362 LETTERS OF or strength, or embonpoint have suffered by this cough; if not, surely there is no real danger; yet I do not wonder she should wish to get rid of so troublesome a companion. When I can meet with the book I will tran- scribe what you mention from Mallet. I shall write again soon. Do you know of any great, or at least rich, family that want a young man worth his weight in gold, to take care of their eldest hope. If you do, remember I have such a one, or shall have (I fear) shortly to sell ; but they must not stand haggling about him ; and besides, they must be very good sort of people too, or they shall not have him. Adieu. My respects to Mrs. Mason. I am ever sincerely yours, Mr. Brown desires his best compliments to you both. LETTER XCIX. TO THE EEV. WILLIAM MASON. DEAR MASON, Jermyn Street, at Mr. Roberts's. Oct. 9, 1766. I am desired to tell you, that if you still continue to be tired of residence, or are in any THE POET GRAY. 363 way moderately ambitious or covetous, there never was a better opportunity. The Duke of Grafton is extremely well inclined, and you know who is at hand to give his assistance; but the apparent channel should be your friend, Lord Holdernesse, who is upon good terms. This was said to me in so friendly a way, that I could not but acquaint you of it immediately. I have made inquiry, since I came hither, on a subject that seemed much to take up your thoughts, and, I do assure you, find not the least grounds to give you uneasiness. It was mere distemper, and nothing more. Adieu. I am sincerely yours, T. G. My respects to Mrs. Mason. LETTER C. TO THE REV. JAMES BROWN. DEAR SlR, Jermyn Street, Oct. 23, 1766. I observed that Ansel* was dead, and made the same reflection about it that you did. I * See Gray's Letter to Mr. Nicholls of Bkmdeston, Oct. 14, 1766, on the death of Ansel, a lay Fellow of Mr. NichohYs College. See Works, vol. v. p. 65. Ansel was a Fellow of Trinity Hall, 22 years senior in standing to Mr. Nicholls. 364 LETTERS OF also wrote to remind N.* of it, but have heard nothing since. We have great scarcity of news here. Every thing is in Lord Ch's breast. If what lies hid there be no better than what conies to light, I would not give sixpence to know it. Spain was certainly of- fered to Lord Weymouth, and in the second place, some say to Sandwich ; at last, perhaps, Sir James Gray may go. But who goes Secretary do you think ? I leave Mr. T. and you ten guesses a-piece, and yet they will be all wrong. Mr. Prowsef has refused the Post Of- fice. I do not believe in any more dukes, un- less, perhaps, my Lord Marquis of Pockinghani should like it. The Prince of Wales has been ill of what they call a fever. They say he is better, but Sir J. Pringle continues to lie every night at Kew. My Lady has discarded * Mr. Norton Nicholls. t See Grenville Papers for mention of Mr. Prowse, vol. i. p. 396, Duke of Newcastle's estimation of him; and p. 398, for Mr. Grenville's letter to liim, Oct. 14, 1761, offering liim the Speakership of the House of Commons ; and p. 402, for his answer. In a letter from Mr. Nugent to Mr. Grenville, Oct. 1764, he says, " Prowse is here (at Bath), not at all well, and lives very much retired. I have heard some things of him which I do not entirely like, although they are only sympto- matic." Mr Prowse was M.P. for Somersetshire for many years, and died in 1767. THE POET GRAY. 365 Thymic* and taken to Sir T.Delaval,t they say. The clothes are actually making, but possibly she may jilt them Loth. The clerk who was displaced in the Post Office lost 1,700Z. a-year. Would you think there could be such under- offices there ? Have you read Mr. Grcnville's Considerations^: on the merits of his own Ad- ministration ? It is all figures ; so, I suppose, it must be true. Have you read Mr. Sharp the surgeon's Travels into Italy ?§ I recom- * Thomas Thynne, third Viscount Weymouth, " an incon- siderable, debauched young man, attached to the Bedfords." See Walpole's George III. ii. 176, and Sir D. Le Marchant's note for further account of him. He was named for Lord Lieu- tenant of Ireland, but never went over. See Walpole's George III. vol. iii. p. 136; iv. pp. 237, 241, 246. In after life he made a much better and more conspicuous figure. f Sir John Delaval died 1727. Sir Thomas Delaval, his son, succeeded. Concerning the descendants of this baronetcy nothing further is known. See Courthope's Extinct Baronet- age, p 61. J George Grenville's " Candid Refutation of the Charges brought against the present Ministers, in a late pamphlet, entitled, The Principles of the late Charges impartially con- sidered, in a Letter to the supposed Author." 8vo. 1765. § See Monthly Review, 1766, p. 399-431, and a good character of them in BoswelTs Johnson, vi. 177;- again in Johnsoniana, p. 442, 8vo. Dr. Johnson says, " As to Italy, Baretti painting the fair side, and Sharp the foul, the truth perhaps lies between the two." 366 LETTERS OE mend these two authors to you instead of Livy and Quintilian. Palgrave, I suppose, you have by this time seen and sifted ; if not, I must tell you, his letter was dated from Glamis, 30 Sept.,* Tuesday night. He was that day returned from my tour in the Highlands, delighted with their beauties, though he saw the Alps last year. The Friday following he was to set out for Hetton,t where his stay would not be long ; then pass four days at Newby, j: and as much at York, and so to Cambridge, where, ten to one, he has not yet arrived. Tom outstripped Lord Panmure at the county court at Forfar all to nothing. Dr. Richmond § is body chaplain to the Duke of Athol, lives at Dunkeld, and eats muir-fowls' livers every day. If you knoAV this already, who can help it ? * Glamis, in Forfarshire, a seat of Lord Strathrnore's. f Hetton, in Durham, was the seat of the Hon. Thomas Lyon, brother of Lord Strathmoi'e. | Newby was Mr. Weddell's seat in Yorkshire. § Probably Richard Richmond, who became Bishop of Sodor and Man 1773, and died in 1780, son of a Sylvester Richmond, rector of "Walton, in Lancashire. He was of the family that produced many clergymen of that name in the last century, all descended from a Sylvester Richmond, a physician in Liverpool towards the close of the 17th century. THE POET GRAY. 367 Pray tell mc, how do you do ; and let me know the sum total of my bill. Adieu. I am ever yours, T. G. Commend me to Mr. Talbot and Dr. Gis- borne. Delaval is coming to you. Is Mr. Mapletoft there ? If not, lie will lie in my rooms. LETTER CI. TO THE REV. JAMES BROWN. DEAR SlR, Jermyn Street, 18 Nov. 1766. I paid the sum above-mentioned this morn- ing at Gillam's office in Bishopsgate Street. The remittance you will please to pay out of it. I nave not time to add all the bad news of the times, but in a few days you shall have some of it ; though the worst of all is just what I can- not write. I am perfectly out of humour, and so will you be. Mason is here, and has brought his wife, a pretty, modest, innocent, interesting figure, looking like 18, though she is near 28. She does not speak, only whispers, and her cough as troublesome as ever ; yet I have great hopes 368 LETTERS OF there is nothing consumptive. She is strong and in good spirits. We were all at the opera together on Saturday last. They desire their loves to you. I have seen Mr. Talbot and Delaval lately. Adieu. I am ever yours, T. G. I cannot find Mons. de la Chalotais* in any of the shops. Lord Strathmore, I am told, is to be married here. I know nothing of Pa. but that he was still at Mr. Weddell's a fort- night since. Be so good to tell me you have received this, if you can, by the return of the post. * Louis Rene de Chalotais, born 1701, died 1785, cele- brated for the part lie took in the expulsion of the Jesuits, and for his dangerous dispute Math D'Aiguilon, which was near leading him to the scaffold. He wrote his Memoirs, and an Essay on National Education, in 1763. He was a man of courage, wit, and talent. See Lacretelle's History, vol. iv. p. 115, and vi. p. 3. Walpole says, in a letter to Conway, " The accusation against Chalotais is for treason. What do you think the treason is ? a correspondence with Mr. Pitt, to whom he is made to say, "that Rennes is nearer to London than Paris." It is now believed that the letters, supposed to have been written by Chalotais, were forged by a Jesuit; those to Mr. Pitt could not have even so good an author." See Walpole's Miscellaneous Correspondence, vol. v. p. 106 ; and Chateaubriand Memoires d'outre-Tombe,vol.ii. pp. 25, 36. ed. 1849. Bruxelles. THE POET GRAY. 309 LETTER CII. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. Dear Mason, p em b. Hall, Jan. 27, 1767. Dean Swift says, one never should write to one's friends but in high health and spirits. By the way it is the last thing people in those circumstances usually think of doing. But it is sure, if I were to wait for them, I never should write at all. At present, I have had for these six weeks a something growing in my throat, which nothing does any service to, and which will, I suppose, in due time stop up the passage. I go however about, and the pain is very little. You will say, perhaps, the malady is as little, and the stoppage is in the imagi- nation ; no matter for that. If it is not suf- ficient to prove want of health (for indeed this is all I ail), it is so much the stronger proof of the want of spirits. So, take it as you please, I carry my point, and shew you that it is very obliging in me to write at all. Indeed, per- haps, on your account, I should not have done it, but, after three such weeks of Lapland weather, I cannot but inquire after Mrs. Mason's health. If she has withstood such a winter and her cough never the worse, she 2b 370 LETTERS OF may defy the doctors and all their works. Pray, tell me how she is, for I interest myself for her, not merely on your account, but on her own. These last three mornings have been very vernal and mild. Has she tasted the air of the new year, at least in Hyde Park ? Mr. Brown will wait on her next week, and touch her. He has been confined to lie on a couch, and under the surgeon's hands ever since the first of January with a broken shin, ill doctored. He has just now got abroad, and obliged to come to town about Monday, on par- ticular business. Stonhewer was so kind as to tell me the mystery now accomplished, before I received your letter. I rejoice in all his accessions. I wish you would persuade him to take unto him a wife, but do not let her be a fine lady. Adieu. Present my respects and good wishes to Argen- tile.* I am, truly yours, T. G. * Mrs. Mason. See p. 342. THE POET GRAY. 371 LETTER CTII. THE REV. WILLIAM MASON TO GRAY. DEAR Mr. GRAY, Cleveland Row, Feb. 2, 1707. No, alas ! she has not withstood the severity of the weather ; it nipped her as it would have done a flower half withered hefore, and she has heen this last month in a most weak condition. Yet this present fine season has enabled me to get her three or four times out into the air, and it seems to have had some good effect, yet not enough to give me any substantial hopes of her recovery. There are few men in the world that can have a competent idea of what I have of late felt, and still feel; yet you are one of those few, and I am sure will give me a full share of your pity. Were I to advise Ston- hewer to a wife, it should certainly be to a fine lady; it should not be to one he could love to the same degree that I do this gentle, this innocent creature. I hope she will be well enough to see Mr. Brown when he comes. Pray tell him we have changed our lodgings, and are to be found at Mr. Menniss', a tailor, at the Golden Ball, in Cleveland Row, the last door but one nearest 2 b 2 '372 LETTERS OF the Green Park wall. Would to God he would persuade you to come with him. If I had spirits for it, I would congratulate you on the new Bishop of Cloyne. Is it not, think you, according to the order of things (I mean not the general hut the peculiar order of our own times), that the mitre which so lately was on the hrows of the man with every virtue under heaven should now adorn those of our friend Frederic ? * I think it prohahle that the swelling you complain of in your throat is owing to some little swelling in a gland. I had a complaint of the same kind a great while, and after I used myself, first, to a flannel round my neck at night, and, afterwards, constantly lying in my stock, the disorder left me. I wish you would try the same method, if you have not tried it already. Dear Mr. Gray, helieve me to he, Yours most cordially, W. Mason. My wife sends her kindest compliments. * Honourable Frederic Hervey (afterwards Earl of Bristol), translated to Cloyne, 1767, and to Derry in 17G8. Gray's allusion is to Bishop Berkeley, as drawn by Pope, in lines warm from the hand of friendship. Manners with candour are to Sutton given, To Berkeley every virtue under heaven. Epilogue to the Satires. THE POET GRAY. 373 LETTER CIV. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. DEAR MASON, Sunday, Feb. 15, 1767. It grieves me to hear the bad account you give of our poor patient's health. I will not trouble you to inquire into the opinions of her physicians; as you are silent on that head, I doubt you are grown weary of the inutility of their applications. I, you will remember, am at a distance, and cannot judge, but by con- jecture, of the progress her disorder seems to make, and particularly of that increasing weak- ness which seems, indeed, an alarming symp- tom. I am told that the sea-air is advised as likely to be beneficial, and that Lord Holder- nesse offers you the use of Walmer Castle,* but * Lord Holdernesse had the Cinque Ports given to him on his retirement from office. See Walpole, in a letter to Mann, vol. i. p. 234. "You will ask what becomes of Lord Holder- nesse ? Truly he is no unlucky man. For a day or two he will be Groom of the Stole, with an addition of 1 000Z. a-year. At last he has the reversion of the Cinque Ports for life, after the Duke of Dorset, who is extremely infirm." See also Belsham's History, v. p. 18. " Lord Holdernesse having secured an ample pecuniary indemnification, together with the rever- sion of the Cinque Ports, resigned the seals." See also Lord Melville's Diary, p. 416; Waldegrave Memoirs, p. 121: .')7 1 LETTERS OF that you wait till the spring is more advanced to put this in execution. I think I should hy no means delay at all. The air of the coast is at all seasons warmer than that of the inland country. The weather is now mild and open, and (unless the rains increase) fit for travelling. Remember how well she bore the journey to London ; and it is certain that sort of motion, in her case, instead of fatigue, often brings an Harris's Life of Lord Hardwick, vol. iii, p. 242 ; and nume- rous places in Walpole's Letters and Histories, where much of him occur, as Miscellaneous Letters, i. 842; iii. 41, 29G; iv. 301, 434; History of George II. vol. i. 198; ii. 84, 124; History of George III. vol. i p. 42; iii. p. 223; iv. p. 311, 314. To the office of Lord Warden a salary of 5000Z. a-year was attached in May 19, 1778. George IH. wrote to Lord North, " I never meant to grant you the Wardenship of the Cinque Ports for life. The being over-persuaded, when quite ignorant of public business, to grant that office for life to Lord Holdernesse, for a particular object, is no reason for doing so now. I daily find the evil of putting so many employments out of the power of the Crown, and for the rest of my life I will not confer any in that way, unless when ancient practice has made it a matter of course. I will confer it on you, during pleasure, with an additional salary, to make it equal to the sum received by Lord Holdernesse." See Lord Mahon's His- tory, vi. xli. Lord Harrington, in a letter to Mitchell, says, "Our friend Holdernesse is finally in harbour; he lias 4000/. a-year fox life, with the reversionship of the Cinque Ports after the Duke oi I >orset," &c. THE POET GRAY. 375 accession of strength. I have lately seen that coast, and been in Deal Castle, which is very similar in situation to Wabner and many other little neighbouring forts ; no doubt, yon may be very well lodged and accommodated there. The scene is delightful in fine weather, but in a stormy day and high wind (and we are but just got so far in the year as the middle of February), exposed to all the rage of the sea and full force of the east wind ; so that, to a per- son unused to the sea, it may be even dreadful. My idea, therefore, is that you might go at present to Ramsgate, which is sheltered from the north, and opening only to the south and south-east, with a very fine pier to walk on.* It is a neat town, seemingly, with very clean houses to lodge in, and one end of it only running down to the shore ; it is at no season much pestered with company, and at present, I suppose, there is nobody there. If you find Mrs. Mason the better for this air and situa- tion (which God send), when May and fine * Sir Egertou Brydges told me that when Gray was staying in Kent with his friend the Rev. W. Robinson, they went over to Ramsgate. The stone pier had just been built. Some one said, " For what did they make this pier?" Gray imme- diately said, " For me to vail; on" and proceeded, with long strides, to claim possession of it. — Ep. 376 LETTERS OF settled weather come in, you will easily remove to Warmer, which at that season will be de- lightful to her. If — forgive me for supposing the worst, your letter leaves me too much reason to do so, though I hope it was only the effect of a melancholy imagination — if it should he necessary to meet the spring in a milder climate than ours is, you are very near Dover, and perhaps this expedient (if she grow very visibly worse) may be preferable to all others, and ought not to be deferred : it is usually too long delayed. There are a few words in your letter that make me believe you wish I were in town. I know myself how little one like me is formed to support the spirits of another, or give him consolation; one that always sees things in their most gloomy aspect. However, be assured I should not have left London while you were in it, if I could well have afforded to stay there till the beginning of April, when I am usually there. This, however, shall be no hindrance, if you tell me it would signify anything to you that I should come sooner. Adieu : you (both of you) have my best and sincerest good wishes. I am ever yours, T. G. P.S. — Remember, if vou go into Kent, that THE POET GRAY. 377 W. Robinson lives at Denton (eight miles from Dover) ; perhaps he and his wife might be of some little use to you. Uim you know ; and for her, she is a very good-humoured, cheerful woman, that (I dare swear) would give any kind of assistance in her power; remember, too, to take whatever medicines you use with you from London. A country apothecary's shop is a terrible thing.* My respects to Dr. Gisborne, and love to Stonhewer. When you have leisure and incli- nation, I should be very glad to hear from you. Need I repeat my kindest good wishes to Mrs. Mason. LETTER CV. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. MY DEAR MASON, March 28, 1767. I break in upon you at a moment when we least of all are permitted to disturb our friends, only to say that you are daily and hourly pre- * So it was in those clays, for Adam Smith computes the value of all the drugs in the shop of a country apothecary at no more than 25/ ! 378 LETTERS OF sent to my thoughts. If the worst be not yet passed, you will neglect and pardon me ; but if the last struggle be over, if the poor object of your lona? anxieties be no longer sensible to your kindness, or to her own sufferings, allow me (at least in idea, for what could I do were I present more than this), to sit by you in silence, and pity from my heart, not her who is at rest, but you who lose her. May He who made us, the Master of our pleasures and of our pains, preserve and support you. Adieu ! I have Ions? understood how little vou had to hope. Xote. — As this little billet, which I received at the Hot Wells almost the precise moment when it would be most affecting, then breathed and still seems to breathe the voice of friend- ship in its tenderest and most pathetic note, I cannot refrain from publishing it in this place. (Mason.) THE POET GRAY. 370 LETTER CVI. THE REV. WILLIAM MASON TO GRAY. Dear Mr. Gray, Bath, April 1st, 1767. The dear testimonial of your friendship reached Bristol about the time when the last offices were done to my lost angel at the cathe- dral, and was brought to me hither just now, where I had fled to my Wadsworth relations a few hours before the ceremony. I cannot ex- press the state of my mind or health, I know not what either of them are ; but I think that I mean at present to steal through London very soon and come to you at Cambridge, though I fear it is about the time you are going to town. I have business there with Sidney College. I can add no more but that I am as much Yours as I am my own, W. M. 380 LETTERS OF LETTER CVII. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. DEAR MASON, Jermyn Street, May 23, 1767. All this time have I been waiting to say something to the purpose, and now am just as far off as at first. Stuart appointed Mr. Wed- dell an hour when I was to meet him; and (after staying an infinite while at his lodgings in expectation) he never came, indeed he was gone out of town. The drawing and your questions remain in Weddell's hands to be shown to this rogue as soon as he can meet with him ; but I firmly believe when he has got them he will do nothing, so you must tell me what I am to do with them. I have shown the Epitaph to no one but LTurd, who entirely approves it. He made no objection but to one line (and that was mine),* " Heav'n lifts," &c. so if you please to make another you may ; for my part I rather like it still. I begin to think of drawing northwards (if * Gray wrote the three last lines of Mason's epitaph on his wife: — " Yet, the dread path once trod, Heav'n lifts its everlasting portals high, And bids the poor in heart heboid their God." THE POET GltAY. 381 my wretched matters will let me), and am going' to write to Mr. Brown about it. You are to consider whether you will be able or w illin g to receive us at Aston about a fortnight hence ; or whether we are to find you at York, where I suppose you to be at present. This you will let me know soon ; and if I am dis- appointed I will tell you in time. You will tell me what to do with your Ziunpe,* which has amused me much here. If you would have it sent down, I had better commit it to its maker, who will tune it and pack it up. Dr. Longt has bought the fellow to it. The base is not quite of a piece with the treble, and the higher notes are somewhat dry and sticky. The rest discourses very eloquent music. Adieu, dear Sir, I am ever yours, T. G. Gisborne, Fraser, and Stonhewer often inquire after you, with many more. * This I presume alludes to the musical instrument invented by Mason, mentioned in the Walpole and Mason Correspon- dence, as the Celestinette. Does Gray call it a Zumpe, from the Zampogna, an instrumento pastorale, mentioned by Bonanni in his Descrizione degli Instrument! Armonici, 1806, 4to. pp. 85, 86, figs, xxvii. xxviii.? but that was a wind instrument. f Dr. Long, the Master of Pembroke College. He had a scientific knowledge of music and of musical instruments. 382 LETTERS OF LETTER CVIII. TO THE REV. JAMES BROWN. DEAR SlR, Jermyn Street, June 2, 1767. Where are you? for I wrote to you last week to know how soon we should set out, and how we should go. Mason writes to-day, he will expect us at Aston in Whitsun-week ; and has ordered all his lilacs and roses to be in flower. What can you he doing ? And so, as I said, shall we go in the Newcastle post-coach or the York coach ? Will you choose to come to town or he taken up on the way ? Or will you go all the way to Bantry in a chaise with me and see sights ? Answer me speedily. In return I will tell you, that you will soon hear great news ; but whether good or bad is hard to say ; there- fore I shall prudently tell you nothing more. Adieu. I am ever yours, T. G. Old Pa. is still here, going to Ranelagh and the Opera. Lady Strathmore is with child, and not very well, as I hear. THE POET GRAY. 383 LETTER CIX. TO THE REV. JAMES BROWN. DEAR SlR, Jermyn Street, Saturday, June G, 17G7. My intention is (Deo volente) to come to Cambridge on Friday or Saturday next; and shall expect to set out on Monday following. I shall write to Mason by to-night's post, who otherwise would expect us all Whitsun-week. Pray that the Trent may not intercept us at Newark, for we have had infinite rain here, and they say every brook sets up for a river. I said nothing of Lady M. Lyon, # because I thought you knew she had been long despaired of. The family I hear now do not go into Scotland till the races are over, nor perhaps then, as my lady will be advancing in her preg- nancy, and I should not suppose the Peats or the Firth very proper in her condition; but women are courageous creatures when they are set upon a thing. Lord Bute is gone ill into the country with an ague in his eye and a bad stomach. Lord Holland is alive and well, and has written three * Wife of Mr. Lyon. See Letter lxxii. 381 LETTERS OF poems;* the only linef in which, that I have heard, is this : — " White-liver'd Grenville and self-loving Gower."J Lord Chatham is , and the Hocking- hams§ are like the brooks that I mentioned * These lines by Lord Holland are given in the Asylum for Fugitive Pieces, vol. ii. p. 9. They are copied into the Selwyn Correspondence, vol. ii. p. 1G2. Lord Holland landed in England 23rd May, 1767. f The poem from which this line is taken, the editor of the Selwyn Correspondence tells us (vol. ii. p. 1G2) was printed on a handsome broad sheet, entitled, " Lord Holland's Eeturn from Italy, 1 7G7." In a letter on the 9th of the previous May, he alludes to his having made some poetry as he came over Mount Cenis. J G Grenville's name needs no other memorial than the portrait of him by the hand of Burke ; see Works, vol. ii. p. 388. On Lord Gower, see Rockingham Papers, ii. p. 47 ; Walpole's Misc. Letters, iv. 314. Also Boswell's Johnson, vol. ii. p. 50, and a character of him drawn at length in Dr. King's Anecdotes of his own Time, p. 45. Lord Holland in 1770 writes to George Selwyn, " I can't imagine what you mean when you speak of joining with me about Lord Gower. I do not remember I said anything about where he lived. I know I do not love him, and can give good reasons for it." See Selwyn Correspondence, ii. 394. See an account of his various appointments in ibid. vol. iii. p. 115; born 1721, died 1803. Also Walpole's Memoirs of George II. pp. 105, 188; Misc. Letters, vi. p. 514. A slight allusion to Mr. Fox's poetry occurs in Sir C. H. Williams's Works, vol. ii. p. 241, note. See also Nichols's Illustrations, v. p 825. § See on the King commissioning Conway to treat with Lord THE POET GRAY. 385 above. This is all the news that I know. Adieu. I am ever yours, T. G. How do you do, good Mr. Brown ? Do your inclinations begin to draw northward, as mine do, and may I take you a place soon ? I wait but for an answer from Mason how to regulate our journey, which I should hope may take place in a little more than a week. I shall write a line again to settle the exact day, but you may now tell me whether you will come to town, or be taken up at Buckden, or thirdly, whether you will go in a chaise with me by short journeys, and see places in our way. I dined yesterday on Richmond-hill, after seeing Chiswick, and Strawberry, and Sion ; and be assured the face of the country looks an eme- rald, if you love jewels. The Westminster Theatre is like to come to a sudden end. The manager will soon embark for Italy without Callista.* The reason is a speech, which his success in Lothario embol- Rockingham, with no restrictions, &c, "Walpole's George III. vol. iii. p. 62. Lord Chatham writes that his (Lord Rock- ingham's) time being that of Minister — Master of the Court — and the public, making offers to men who are seekers of office, &c. See Chatham Corr. iii. p. 12 (1766). * See on this subject Cavendish's Debates, pp. 596, 603; 2 c 386 LETTERS OF dened him to make the other day in a greater theatre. It was on the subject of America, and added so much strength to the opposition, that they came within six of the majority. He did not vote, however, though his two brothers did, and, like good boys, with the ministry. For this he has been rattled on both sides of his cars, and forbid to appear there any more. The Houses wait with impatience the conclusion of the East India business to rise.* The E. of Chatham f is mending slowly in his health, but sees nobody on business yet, nor has he since he came from Marlborough : yet he goes out daily for an airing. Adolphus's Hist. i. p. 289 ; Walpole's Misc. Letters, v. 175 (Dec. 1766) ; and his Letters to Mann, i. p. 345. " This is not the only walk of fame he (Duke of York) has lately chosen. He is acting plays with Lady Stanhope (wife of Sir Wm. Stan- hope) and her family the Delavals. They have several times played the Fair Penitent. His Royal Highness is Lothario; the lady, I am told, an admirable Callista. They have a pretty little flu 402 LETTERS OF 5. Such was the maid, that, in the noon of youth, 6. In virgin innocence, in nature's pride, 7. Blest with each art that taste supplies or truth, 8. Sunk in her father's fond embrace and died. 9. He weeps. O ! venerate the holy tear; 10. Faith lends her aid to ease affliction's load: 11. The parent mourns his child upon her bier, 12. The Christian yields an angel to his God. Various sections, pick and choose. 2. " Inborn sentiment." 3. " Displayed (or diffused) that harmony, &c. 7. " That springs from taste or truth ;" " de- rived from taste or truth;" "that charms with taste and truth." But, after all, I do not know that she was a metaphysician, " blest with each art that owes its charms to truth," which painting does, as well as logic and meta- physics. 10. " Faith lends her lenient aid to sorrow's load ; " " Faith lends her aid, and eases (or lightens) sorrow's load." 11. " Pensive he mourns," or " he views" or " gives." 12. " Yet humbly yields," or " but humbly." Now if from all this you can pick out twelve ostensible lines, do, and I will father them ; or if you will out of that lukewarm corner of your THE POET GRAY. 403 heart where you hoard up your poetical charity throw out a poor mite to my distresses, I shall take it kind indeed ; but, if not, stat prior sententia, for I will give myself no further trouble about it ; I cannot in this uncomfort- able place, where my opus magnum sive didac- ticum has not advanced ten lines since I saw you. God bless Dr. Wharton, and send him (for sympathy) never to feel what I feel. I will come to him the moment I can. Write, be sure, when you return from your longer tour ; but I hope to have an answer to this before you set out, because I shall not give the Archbishop any determinate answer about the matter till I hear again from you. The Robin- sons are just arrived. Adieu. W. M. I must needs tell you, as an instance of my enjoyments here, that yesterday Mr. Comber* preached again, and dined with me, and in * Probably William Comber, M.A. Vicar of Kirkby-Moor- side, Yorkshire, second son of Thomas, LL.D. of Buckworth, Huntingdon, who published, in 1778, the Memoirs of the Lord Deputy Wandesford, 12mo. The present person was, therefore, grandson of Thomas Comber, D.D. Dean of Durham, of whom a life was published by his great-grandson, Thomas Comber, A.B. of Jesus' College, Cambridge. 2d 2 404 LETTERS OF the afternoon who bnt Billy Hervey should preach and drink tea with me. The said Billy inquired most cordially after you, and has got your directions how to come at you by Kirk- something and Spennymoor House, for he is going into Scotland with a Scotch captain ten times duller than himself. You will have them at Old Park almost as soon as this, if you do not run away. Anecdote. — The country folks are firmly per- suaded that the storm (which made us get up here) was raised by the devil, out of revenge to Comber for preaching at him the day before in the Minster. LETTER CXVI. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. DEAR MASON, Old Park, 9 Aug. 1767; Sunday. I have been at Hartlepool like anything, and since that, visiting about (which is the sum of all my country expeditions), so that I was not able to write to you sooner. To-morrow I go vizzing to Gibside to see the new married TILE POET GRAY. -1-0. "i countess,* whom (bless my eyes ! ) I have seen here already. There I drop our beatified friend, who goes into Scotland with them, and return hither all alone. Soon after I hope to go into Cumberland, &c, and when that is over shall let you know. I exceedingly approve the epitaph in its pre- sent shape. Even what I best liked before is altered for the better. The various readings I do not mind, only, perhaps, I should read the 2nd line : Grace that with tenderness and sense combined, To form, &c. for I hate " sentiment " in verse. I will say nothing to "taste" and "truth," for perhaps the Archbishop may fancy they are fine things ; but, to my palate, they are wormwood. All the rest is just as it should be, and what he ought to admire. Billy Hervey t went directly to Durham, and called not here. He danced at the Assembly with a conquering mien, and all the misses swear he is the genteelest thing they ever * Lady Strathmore. Gibside is a seat of Lord Strathmore's, in Durham, not far from Newcastle-upon-Tyne, and near to Kavensworth Castle. f Frederic William Hervey, Bishop of Cloyne. 4=06 LETTERS OF set eyes on, and wants nothing but two feet more in height. The Doctor and Mr. Brown send their blessing ; and I am ever yours, T. G. LETTER CXVI1. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. Dear Mason, old Park, Sep. 11, 1767. I admire you as the pink of perversity. How did I know about York races, and how could I be more explicit about our journey?* The truth is, I was only too explicit by half, for we did not set out in earnest till the 29th of August, being delayed, partly by the bad weather, and partly by your cousin, my Lord Perrot, and his assizes, whose train we were afraid to overtake, and still more afraid of being overtaken by it. At last then we went in the sun and dust broiling to New- castle, and so by the military road to Hexham at night, where it began to rain, and continued like fury, with very short intervals, all the rest * Gray passed all the latter part of this summer in the North of England, with his friends Mr. Brown and Dr. Whar- ton. See Works, vol, iv. p. 98. THE POET GRAY. 10" of our way. So we got to Carlisle, passed a day there in raining and seeing delights. Next day got to Penrith — more delights ; the next dined and lay at Keswick ; could not go a mile to see anything. Dr. Wharton taken ill in the night with an asthma. Went on, how- ever, over stupendous hills to Cockermouth. Here the Doctor grew still worse in the night, so we came peppering and raining back through Keswick to Penrith. Next day lay at Brough, grew better, raining still, and so over Stone- moor home. Sep. 5th. — In a heavy thunder- shower. Now you will think from this detail, which is literally true, that we had better have staid at home. No such thing ; I am charmed with my journey, and the Doctor dreams of nothing but Skiddaw, and both of us vow to go again the first opportunity. I car- ried Mr. Brown to Gibside the 11th of August, and took a receipt for him ; they did not set out for Scotland till the 1st of September, and as yet I have not heard from him. If you are not too much afflicted for the loss of Charles Townshend,* now is your time to * On Charles Townshend's death, see Cavendish Debates, vol. i. p. 608. He died Sept. 4, 1767, aged 42. Horace Walpole writes to General Conway, " As a man of incom- parable parts and most entertaining to a spectator I regret his 408 LETTERS OF come and see us. In spite of your coquetry, we still wish of all things to see you, and (hating that vice, and a few more little faults) have a good opinion of you, only we are afraid you have a had heart. I have known purse- proud people often complain of their poverty, which is meant as an insult upon the real poor. How dare you practise this upon me ? Do not I know little Clough ? Here is a fuss indeed ahout a poor three-score miles. Don't I go gal- loping five hundred, whenever I please ? Have done with your tricks, and come to Old Park, for the peaches and grapes send forth a good smell, and the voice of the robin is heard in our land. My services to Mr. Alderson,* for he is a good creature. But I forget, you are at York again. Adieu ! I am, ever yours, T. G. The Doctor presents his compliments to you death. His good humour prevented one from hating him, and his levity from loving him ; but in a political light I own I cannot look on it as a misfortune." vol. v. p. 181. See also his opinion at more length in his Memoirs of George III. vol. ii. pp. 9 and 275; vol. iii. pp. 23, 29, 99, 102. See also Lady Hervey's Letters, p. 325; Belsham's History, v. 278; Adolphus's History, i. p. 304; and especially Burke's Works, ii. p. 422. The Rev. Christopher Alderson, then curate to Mr. Mason, •ul'M j v\Tl Mtt PttOWSSmR Hornby Castle, August I will not congratulate yon, for I would not have you think I am glad, and I take for granted you do not think I am, or at least would not have me so to be, else you would have given me a line ; but no matter. I went the other day to Old Park, and read what you had written to the Doctor, and he was not so glad neither as to hinder him from making water, which he did all the time I was with him, and continues still to do so, and thinks he shall not give over for some months. Do not be afraid, the discharge does not come from his vesicatory, but his pecuniary ducts, and I, as physician, and Summers, as apothecary, hold it to be a most salutary diabetes. I have my good luck too, I can tell you, for when I was at Hull I met with a Roman ossuary of exquisite sculpture. How I came by it no matter ; it is enough that I am pos- sessed of it. I send you the inscription, which your brother Lort,* of Halifax, may, perhaps, * Gray, in a letter to Miss Antrobns, 29th July, 17G8, THE POET GRAY. 421 help Hie to construe, for as to yourself I take for granted that all your skill in the learned languages transpired in the kiss which you gave his Majesty's little finger, and you rose up a mere modern scholar, with nothing left but a little Linnaean jargon. Be this as it may, here is the inscription literatim : PONPONIA PRIMI GENIAE T PONPONIO PELICI P. ET P. PA. The first three lines I read, " Pomponia primi- geniae Tito Pomponio Pelici ; " but as to the rest it is all Hebrew Greek to me. Seriously, if you can make it out for me, I shall be obliged to you. I go to York on Thursday, but I mean to speaking of his Professorship, says, " The only people Avho asked for it are Lort, Marriott, Delaval, Tebb, and Peck; at least I have heard of no more. . . . Lort is a worthy man, and I wish he could have it, or something as good. The rest are nothing." See Works, iv. p. 123. " Lort," says Professor Smyth (in a MS. letter to me,) " was a scholar and antiquary, afterwards chaplain to the Archbishop of Canter- bury, rector of Fulham, and Prebendary of St. Paid's. He died from the effects produced by an overturn of his carriage. See Nichols's Anecdotes, vii. 237, 618, and Lit. Illustrations, vii. 438, where is a portrait of him. Boswell says, " Multis ille bonis flebilis occidit." 122 LETTERS OF call in my way on Mr. Weddell and Proud Pal - grave* on "Wednesday. Remember me kindly to your brother, Mr. Professor Shepherd, f and the successor of Mr. Professor Miekleborough ; $ and believe me to be, dear Mr. Professor, Yours most truly and sincerely, W. Mason. LETTER CXXin. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. DEAR MASON, Pembroke College, Sept, 7, 1768. What can I say more to you about Odding- ton ?§ You seem engaged to Mr. Wood, and in consequence of that to Mr. Meller. Mr. Brown is not here, and if he were I could by * In Lord Harcourt's MS. Correspondence with Mason he is called " Le petit Palgrave.'' f A. Shepherd, A.M. of Christ's College, Professor of Astro- nomy and Experimental Philosophy in 17G0. He was suc- ceeded in 1796 by Mr. Vince. J T. Mickleburgh, A.M. of Corpus Christi College, Professor of Chemistry in 1718. His successor was T. Hardy, M.A of Queen's, in 175G, He was succeeded by Dr. Watson, after- wards Bishop of LlandafF. § Rectory in Gloucestershire, a living in the gift of Mason, i he Precentor of York. THE POET GRAY. 423 no means consult him about it. His view to the mastership will be affected by it just in the same manner as if he had accepted of Fram- lingham* and had it in possession, which I little doubt he would accept if it were vacant and undisputed. As to the dubious title, he told me of it himself, and I was surprised at it as a thing quite new to me. This is all I know ; nor (if you were under no previous engage- ments) could I direct or determine your choice. It ought to be entirely your own ; as to accept or refuse ought to be entirely his. The only reason I have suggested anything about it is, that (when we first talked on this subject) you asked me whether Mr. Brown would have it ; and I replied, it would hardly be worth his while, as Framlingham was of greater value ; in which, all things considered, I may be mis- taken. I give you joy of your vase ; I cannot find P. et P. PA. in my Sertorius Ursatus, and consequently do not know their meaning. What shall I do ? My learned brethren are dispersed over the face of the earth. I have lately dug up three small vases, in workman- * Framlingham, a market town in Suffolk. The rectory is in the gift of Pembroke College. Its castle is well known to antiquaries, and the monument of Lord Surrey, in the church, to pi » 424 LETTERS OF ship at least equal to yours ; they were disco- vered at a place called Burslem in Stafford- shire, and are very little impaired by time. On the larger one is this inscription very legibly, s 9 -; and on the two smaller thus, \. You will oblige me with an explanation, for Ursatus here too leaves us in the dark. I fear the King of Denmark* could not stay till your hair was dressed. He is a genteel lively figure, not made by nature for a fool ; but surrounded by a pack of knaves, whose interest it is to make him one if they can. He has overset poor Dr. Marriot's head here, who raves of nothing else from morning till night. t Pray make my best compliments to your brother-residentiary Mr. Cowper, and thank * Christian the Seventh, who married Caroline Matilda, the posthumous child of Frederic Prince of Wales; she died at Zell, 1775. See account of her in Walpole's Miscellaneous Letters, vol. iv. p. 329; v. 215-217. Walpole's Letters to Mann, i. p. 399; ii. p. 2. Memoirs of George III. ii. p. 257; iii. p. 235; iv. pp. 163, 280. Selwyn Correspondence, ii. pp. 326, 341. Lord Mahon's History, v. p. 463. Belsham's History, vi. p. 232. Cavendish Debates, vol. i. pp. 283, 612. See also Wraxall's Memoirs of the Courts of Berlin, Dresden, &c. vol. i. p. 47, &c. f See Gray's Letter to Nicholls, Works, v. p. 80. " His Danish Majesty has had a diarrhea, so could not partake of Dr. Marriott's collation; if he goes thither at all, I will contrive not to be present at the time." THE POET GRAY. 425 him for his obliging letter of congratulation, which I did not at all expect. Present also my respects and acknowledgements to Miss Polly. Mr. Bedingfield I shall answer soon, both as to Ins civilities and his reproaches ; the latter you might have prevented by telling him that I gave my works to nobody, as it was only a new edition. Adieu ; write to me. I am ever yours, T. Gr. LETTER CXXIV. GRAY TO MASON. 29th December, 17G8. Oh, wicked Scroddles ! There have you gone and told my arcanum arcanorum* to that * This arcanum arcanorum must, I think, be an allusion to the lines written by Gray, in 17G6, on Lord Holland's seat at Kingsgate. See Gray's Poems, vol. i. p. 161, ed. Aid. Walpole says, on these lines, " I am very sorry that he ever wrote them and ever gave a copy of them. You may be sure I did not recommend their being printed in his ivorks, nor were they." See Letters to Lady Ossory, ii. 193, and Miscel- laneous Correspondence, ii. 574, and Letters to Mason, i. p. 109. The lines were written at Denton, in Kent, when on a visit to Rev. William Robinson, and found in a drawer of Gray's room, after his departure. They are given with the variations of the MSS. in the Aldine edition, vol. i. p. 161. They were printed in the Gent. Mag. and afterwards in Kichols's Select Poems, vol. vii. p. 350, before they appeared in his works. 426 LETTERS OF leaky mortal Palgrave, who never conceals any thing he is trnsted with; and there have I been forced to write to him, and (to bribe him to silence) have told him how much I confided in his taciturnity, and twenty lies beside, the guilt of which must fall on you at the last account. Seriously, you have done very wrong. Surely you do not remember the imprudence of Dr. G., # who is well known to that rogue in Piccadilly, and who at any time may be denounced to the " Foxium patrern," says Mr. W. S. Landor, "satira perstrinxit Grains acerrima, in quo genere vidi ejus alia summi acuminis." Landor, de Cultu Latini Sermonis, p. 196. Of these lines it must indeed be said, they were " satira acerrima." The following jeux d'esprits by Gray were once in the pos- session of Mason, but were probably destroyed by him: — 1. Duke of Newcastle's journal going to Hanover. 2. History of the Devil : a fragment. 3. The Mob Grammar. 4. Character of the Scotch. 5. Fragments of an Act of Parliament relating to monu- ments erected in Westminster Abbey. Mason also mentions a fragment of Mr. Gray's, " A History of Hell," which appears to have been a pontical squib. See Walpole and Mason Correspondence, i. 66. " Pray take no- tice of the conclusion concerning Kingcraft, and tell me whe- ther he is not a prophet as well as poet." See also p. 156. * Dr. Gisborne. Who the rogue in Piccadilly was, I do not know, for there was no Court Guide, in those days. Lord Bath, who had lived there, was dead; but Lord March was then living in the street. The parish rate-books, which still exist, would be the only guide that I know in solving the mystery. THE POET GRAY. 427 party concerned, which five shillings reward may certainly bring about. Hitherto luckily nobody has taken any notice of it, nor I hope ever will. Dr. Balguy tells me you talk of Cambridge ; come away then forthwith, when your Christ- mas duties and mince-pies are over ; for what can you do at Aston, making snow-balls all January.* Here am I just returned from London. I have seen Lt. f whose looks are much mended, and he has leave to break up for a fortnight, and is gone to Bath. Poor Dr. Hurd has undergone a painful operation : they say it was not a fistula, but something very like it. He is now in a way to be well, and by this time goes abroad again. Delaval was con- fined two months with a like disorder. He suffered three times under the hands of Haw- kins, and, though he has now got out, and walking the streets, does not think himself cured, and still complains of uneasy sensations. Nobody but I and Eraser, and Dr. Ross (who * About two mouths after the date of this letter Mr. James Harris wrote to Chancellor Hoadly, saying, " Mason preached at St. James's, early prayers, and gave a fling at the French for their invasion of Corsica. Thus politics, you see, have entered the sanctuary." See Wooll's Life of J Warton, p. 343. f Mr. Lort, before mentioned. 428 LETTERS OF it is said is just made Dean of Ely), are quite well. Dr. Thomas,* of Christ's, is Bishop of Carlisle. t Do not you feel a spice of concu- piscence ? Adieu. I am ever yours, T. G. * Dr. Thomas was Master of Christ's College; was offered a bishoprick, and persuaded by Law, formerly of Christ's and Master of Peterhouse, to decline it, that he himself might be nominated Bishop. Such was always the representation of Mrs. Thomas. — MS. Note by Professor Smyth to me. f Edmund Law was made Bishop of Carlisle in 1768. A Dr. John Thomas, Bishop of Winchester, was translated from Peterborough in 1757. See Walpole's George II. vol. i. p. 292 ; George ILL vol. i. p 75 ; iv. p. 370, for an account of him; but on the subject of these synonymous doctors see Bishop Newton's Autobiography, p. 59. " Dr. Thomas, who died Bishop of Salisbury. I so describe him, for it was not always easy to distinguish the two Dr. Thomas's. Somebody was speaking of Dr. Thomas ; he was asked, Which Dr. Thomas do you mean ? Dr. John Thomas. They are both named John. Dr. Thomas, who has a living in the City. They both have livings in the City. Dr. Thomas, who is Chaplain to the King. They are both Chaplains to the King. Dr. Thomas, who is a very good preacher. They are both very good preachers. Dr. Thomas, who squints. They both squint; for Dr. Thomas, who died Bishop of Winchester, handsome as he was, had a little cast in one of his eyes. John Thomas, Bishop of Salis- bury, was Preceptor to the Prince of Wales (George III.)." See on him Waldegrave's Memoirs, p. 10 and p. 36; in the latter place he is called Bishop of Norwich (by mistake). I THE POET GRAY. 429 Mr. Brown's companion here is Lord Richard.* What is come of Foljambe ? f Service to my curate. may add that both these John Thomas's had been Bishops of Salisbury, one in 1757, the other in 1761. He of Salisbury- died in 17G6; he of Winchester in 1791: but there was a third Dr. John Thomas, who succeeded Dr. Pearce as Dean of Westminster, and on his death, in 1774, succeeded him as the Bishop of Rochester. An old Kentish gentleman, a neighbour of this Bishop's, told me, many years ago, that he knew him well ; but all he remembered, or rather all he communicated, was, that the Bishop used to net partridges, which he thought very unlike a sportsman. The portrait of this Dr. Thomas, by Sir Joshua Reynolds, is in the Bridgwater Gallery, No. 270, and his monument in Westminster Abbey, with his bust by Nollekens, and a Latin inscription by his nephew, G. A. T. The Bishop died August 20, 1793, aged 81 years. * Lord Richard Cavendish. ■j" " Here is Mr. Foljambe has got a flying hobgoblin from the East Indies and a power of rarities ; then he has given me such aphalaena,with looking-glasses in its wings, and a queen of the white ants, &c Oh! she is a jewel of a pismire." Gray's Letter to Nicholls, vide Works, v. p. 113. Mason, in a letter to Horace Walpole in 1771, asks him for a recom- mendatory letter or two to some persons of fashion at Paris, for a young gentleman of his neighbourhood, Mr. Foljambe, of an ancient family and good fortune, &c. See Walpole and Mason Correspondence, vol. i. p. 40. This person was pro- bably Francis Ferrand Home Foljambe, who represented the county of York 1787; married as his second wife Arabella, daughter of Lord Scarborough, in 1792; died in 1814. The arms of twenty families appear on the Foljambe monuments 430 LETTERS OF LETTER CXXV. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. Old Park, DEAR MASON, Saturday, August 26th, 1769. I received last night your letter, big with another a week older than itself. You might as well have wrote to me from the deserts of Arabia, and desired me to step over and drink a dish of tea with you. This morning I sent to Auckland for a chaise; the man's answer is that he had a chaise with four horses returned yesterday from Hartlepool, that the road was next to impassable, and so dangerous that he does not think of sending out any other that way, unless the season should change to a long drought. I would have gone by Durham, but am assured that road is rather worse. What can I do ? You speak so jauntily, and enter so little into any detail of your own journey, that I conclude you came on horseback from Stock- ton (which road, however, is little better for carriages). If so, we hope you will ride over to at Chesterfield. His seats, Osberton, Notts ; Aldweston, York- shire. Sir Thomas Foljambe was a person of public note in the time of Henry the Third. THE POET GllAY. 431 Old Park with Mr. Alclerson ;* there is room for you both, and hearty welcome. The doctor even talks of coming (for he can ride) to invite you on Monday. I wonder how you are accom- modated where you are, and what you are doing with Gen. Carey. I would give my ears to get thither, but all depends on the sun. Adieu. It is twenty miles to Old Park, and the way is by Hart, over Sheraton Moor, and through Trimdon. There is no village else that has a name. Pray write a line by the bearer. T. Gray. We have a confirmation of the above account of the state of the roads from other evidences ; nevertheless, I shall certainly come on horse- back on Monday to inquire after your proceed- ings and designs, and to prevail upon you and Mr. Alderson to return with me to Old Park. A rainy morning, perhaps, may stop us a few hours, but when it clears up I shall set forward. Adieu ; accept all our compliments. Yours ever, T. Wharton. * The Rev. Christopher Alderson, curate to Mr. Mason, and afterwards Eector of Aston and of Eckington, before alluded to. 432 LETTERS OF LETTER CXXVI. ■ TO THE REV. JAMES BROWN. DEAR SlR, Lancaster, 10 Oct. 1769. I set out on the 29th September, with poor Doctor Wharton, and lay at Brough, but he was seized with a fit of the asthma the same night, and obliged in the morning to return home. I went by Penrith to Keswick, and passed six days there lap'd in Elysium ; then came slowly by Ambleside to Kendal, and this day arrived here. I now am projecting to strike across the hills into Yorkshire, by Settle, and so get to Mason's ; then, after a few days, I shall move gently towards Cambridge. The weather has favoured all my motions just as I could wish. I received your letter of 23 Sept. ; was glad you deviated a little from the common track, and rejoiced you got well and safe home. I am, ever yours, T. G. THE POET GRAY. \'Y.) LETTER CXXVII. TO RICHARD &TONHEWER, ESQ., DURHAM. (By Caxton Bail. | My DEAR Silt, Cambridge, November 2, 1769. I am sincerely pleased with every mark of your kindness, and as such I look upon your last letter in particular.* I feel for the sorrow you have felt, and yet I cannot wish to lessen it; that would be to rob you of the best part of your nature, to efface from your mind the tender memory of a father's love, and deprive the dead of that just and grateful tribute which his goodness demanded from vou. I must, however, remind you how happy it was for him that you were with him to the last; that he was sensible, perhaps, of your care, when every other sense was vanishing'. He might have lost you the last year, t might have seen you go before him, at a time when all the ills of helpless old age were coming upon him, * Mr. Stonhewer's father, the Rev. Richard Stonhewer, D.D., Rector of Houghton-le-Spring, Durham, died 1769. See Gent. Mag., Deaths (November). This short, but exquisitely tender and beautiful letter, will not be passed by tite readei ■without the attentive feeling it deserves. f I bad been very ill at the time alluded to. — fif. 2 F A3I LETTERS OF and, though not destitute of the attention and tenderness of others, yet destitute of your atten- tion and your tenderness. May God preserve you, my best friend, and, long after my eyes are closed, give you that last satisfaction in the gratitude and affection of a son, which you have given your father. I am ever most truly and entirely yours, T. G. LETTER CXXVni. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. DEAR, SlR, Pembroke College, December 2nd, 1769. I am afraid something is the matter with you that I hear nothing from you since I passed two days with you in your absence. I am not in Ireland, as you perhaps might imagine by this natural sentence, but shall be as glad to hear from you as if I were. A week ago I saw something in the news- paper signed " An Enemy to Brick "Walls in Improper Places." While I was studying how, for brevity's sake, to translate this into Greek, Mr. Brown did it in one word, Mao-ovt^y. I hope it is not that complaint, hard I must own THE POET GRAY. 435 to digest, that sticks in your stomach, and makes you thus silent. I am sorry to tell you that I hear a very bad account of Dr. Hurd. He was taken very ill at Thurcaston, and obliged with difficulty to be carried in a chaise to Leicester. He remained there confined some time before he could be conveyed on to London. As they do not men- tion what his malady is, I am much afraid it is a return of the same disorder that he had last year in town. I am going thither for a few days myself, and shall soon be able to tell you more of hini. Wyatt* is returned hither very calm but me- lancholy, and looking dreadfully pale. He thinks of orders, I am told. Adieu. I am ever yours, T. G. * The Rev. William Wyatt, A.M., F.R.S., elected Fellow of Pembroke College in 1763, Rector of Framlingham-cum- Saxted in 1782, and in 1792 of Theberton in Suffolk; buried Feb. 8, 1813, aged 71 years. 2 F 2 436 LETTERS OF LETTER CXXIX. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. DEAR SlR, Jermyn Street, 14th Dec. 1769. I have seen Dr. Hurd, and find the storv I told you is not true, though (I thought) I had it on very good authority. He was indeed ill at Thurcaston, hut not so since, and walked an hour in Lincoln's Inn walks with nie very hearty, though his complexion presages no good. St.* is come to town, and in good health. The weather and the times look very gloomy, and hang on my spirits, though I go to the Italian puppet show (the reigning diversion) to exhi- larate them. I return to Cambridge on Tues- day next, where I desire you would send me a more exhilarating letter. Adieu. I am ever yours, T. G. All your acquaintances here are well — Lord Newnham and Mr. Ramsden, and all. * Stonhewer. THE POET GRAY. 437 LETTER CXXX. to the rev. william mason. Dear Mason, 1770. I am very well at present, the usual effect of my summer expeditions, and much obliged to you, gentlemen, for your kind inquiry after me. I have seen Worcestershire, Gloucestershire, Monmouthshire, Herefordshire, Shropshire — five of the best counties this kingdom has to produce. The chief grace and ornament of my journey was the river Wye, which 1 descended in a boat from Ross to Chepstow (near forty miles), surrounded with ever-new delights; among which were the New Weir (see Whate- ley), Tintern Abbey, and Persfield. I say nothing of the Yale of Abergavenny, Ragland Castle, Ludlow, Malvern Hills, the Leasowes, and Hagley, &c, nor how I passed two days at Oxford very agreeably. The weather was very hot, and generally serene. I envy not your Greffiers,* nor your Wensley-dale and Aisgarth Eorces ; but did you see Winander-mere and Grass-mere ? Did you get to Keswick, and what do you think of the matter ? I stayed a * His allusion to Greffiers or registrars must refer to some passage in a letter of Mason's "which is wanting. 438 LETTERS OE fortnight stewing in London, and now am in the niidst of this dead quiet, with nohody hut Mr. President* near me, and he " is not dead, hut sleepeth." The politics of the place are that Bishoj) Warhurton will chouse Bishop Keenef out of Ely hy the help of Lord Mansfield, who can he refused nothing at present. Every one is fright- ened except Tom Neville. Palgrave, I suppose, is at Mr. Weddell's, and has told you the strange casualties of his house- hold. Adieu. I am ever yours, T. G. The letter in question was duly received. * The Rev. James Brown, President of Pembroke College. f Bishop Keene was translated from Chester to Ely, 1771. See account of this transaction in Bishop Newton's Life of Himself, p. 114. In 1764 there was a correspondence between Warburton and George Grenville on the bishopric of London, which was vacant by the death of Osbaldeston, when Terrick was appointed to it. See Grenville Papers, vol. ii. pp. 313 — 316. Bishop Keene had, in 1764, refused the Primacy of Ireland: see ibid. pp. 534, 535. THE POET GRAY. 430 LETTER CXXXl. TO THE REV. JAMES BROWN. DEAR SlR, Jermyn Street, May 22, 1770. I have received two letters from, you with one inclosed from Paris and one from Mason. I met poor Barber (?) two or three days after the fire with evident marks of terror in his coun- tenance ; he has moved his quarters (I am told) somewhere into Gray's-inn-lane, near the fields. I do not apprehend anything more than usual from the City Remonstrance ;* and the * See Hansard's Parliamentary Reports, vol. xvi. p. 900, for the Address of both Houses to the King on the City Re- monstrance. The addresses and answers were in the Annual Register, 1770, p. 199 to p. 203. In the Misc. Correspon- dence of Horace Walpole, so well edited by Mr. Wright, vol. v. p. 275, is a note on this subject, in which the Editor quotes a MS. note of Isaac Reed, saying, " That Beckford did not utter one syllable of this speech. It was penned by Home Tooke, and by his art put on the records of the city and on Beckford's statue, as he told me, Mr. Braithwaite, Mr. Sayer, &c. at the Athenaeum Club:" then adding, " There can be but little doubt that the worthy Commentator and his friends were imposed upon ;" meaning, I presume, they were imposed upon by Home Tooke. If so, it was an imposition which he main- tained also with others. My friend Mr. William Maltby, of the London Institution, whom I questioned on the subject, answers me to this effect: — "Dr. Charles Burney first told me the J 1 ( ) LETTERS OF party principally concerned, I hear, does not in the least regard it. The conversation you men- tion in the House of Lords is very true; it happened about a fortnight since; and the Archbishop replied, it was not any concern of his, as he had received no complaint from the University on that head. It begins to be doubted whether Lord Anglesey * will carry speech in Guildhall was written by Home Tooke, and was never delivered. The first time I saw Mr. Tooke afterwards I asked him the question. He "said he wrote every word of that speech, and he was much amused when one of the corporation said he had heard every word- of it delivered, with the exception of " two" and " necessary." It must be remembered that Charles Townshend said " That Beckford had made no bad speech upon the exclamation of His Majesty (in 1763). It is com- posed upon good ideas of taste, and firm and explicit, without being indecent or warm." See Grenville Papers, ii. 133, and Rockingham Memoirs, vol. ii. p. 173 ; and for some account of Beckford, ibid. p. 169. * This alludes to the disputed Peerage. Arthur, on arriving at his majority 1765, took his seat as Lord Valentia, after an investigation by the Lords of Ireland of nearly four years, during his minority ; his succession to the Irish estates being opposed by his kinsman, John Annesley, derived from the fijfit Kegent Valentia. When he petitioned for his writ of summons to the Parliament of Great Britain as Earl of Anglesey, the judgment was against him. A renewal of the claim again took place in Ireland, when they came to the same Conclusion as before, and confirmed the claim. So his Lord- .•lii]) fiijnycd his Iritdi honours; bul the earldom in England TILE POET GRAY. 141 his point, his witnesses being so very Irish in their understandings and consciences that they puzzle the cause they came to prove ; but this cannot be cleared up till another session. Pa. and I have often visited, but never met. I saw my Lord and Tom* the other day at breakfast in good health ; and Lady Maria did not beat me, but giggled a little. Monsieur de Villervielle has found me out, and seems a sen- sible, quiet young man. He returns soon to France with the ambassador, but means to revisit England and see it better. I dined at Hampton Court on Sunday all alone with St. who inquired after you ; and the next day with the same, and a good deal of company in town. was considered as extinct, and the title of the latter conferred .hi another family. See Gent. Magazine on this subject, vol. xiv. xxi. xxvi. xli. Dr. Balguy wrote to Dr. Warton: " I doubt your friend Lord Lyttelton is by no means sure of success in the business of the Anglesey claim. There is proof, not easy to be overcome, that the certificate of the marriage is forged. The House wait at present for some living witnesses from Ireland" See Wooll's Life of Warton, p. 372. It was published as " The Trial or Ejectment between Campbell Craig, lessee of James Annesley, Esq. and other plaintiffs, and the Right Hon. Eichard Earl of Anglesey, defendant. Dublin, 1774." For full particulars see Collins's Peerage, art. Anglesey. * Lord Strathmore and Thomas Lyon, and Lady Maria Lyon his wife. J42 LETTERS OF I have not seen hini so well this long time. I am myself indifferent ; the head-ache returns now and then, and a little grumbling of the gout ; but I mean to see you on Monday or Tuesday next. Adieu. I am ever yours, T. G. P.S. Pray is Mrs. Olliffe come to Cam- bridge ? LETTER CXXXII. TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. DEAR MASON, Pembroke Hall, Oct. 24, 1770. I have been for these three weeks and more confined to my room by a fit of the gout, and am now only beginning to walk alone again. I should not mention the thing, but that I am well j^ersuaded it will soon be your own case, as you have so soon laid aside your horse, and talk so relishingly of your old port. I cannot see any objection to your design for Mr. Pierce. As to Wilson* we know him much alike. He seems a good honest lad ; and I believe is scholar enough for your purpose. Per- haps this connection may make (or mar) his * Thomas Wilson, elected Fellow of Pembroke in 1767; became vicar of Soham 1769; died 1797 = THE POET GRAY. 443 fortune. Our friend Foljambe * lias resided in college, and persevered in the ways of godliness till about ten days ago, when he disappeared, and no one knows whether he is gone a hunting or a * * * The little Eitzherbert t is come a * A Fellow Commoner of Bene't College, of a Yorkshire family, and a person of fortune. He was lineally descended from one of the knights who murdered Becket. A carving in bas-relief in stone was ordered by the King, soon after the murder, to be placed in the castle of this Knight, which repre- sented the deed : it was in the possession of Mason. See pre- vious note to Letter cxxiv. f The little Fitzherbert was afterwards Lord St. Helen's, brother of the one mentioned in Letter ex. : he took a high degree in 1774. Of the visit which Gray paid to him on the occasion, Lord St. Helen's gave an account to Mr. Samuel Rogers, which he has allowed me to transcribe from his own words: — "I came to St. John's College, Cambridge, in 1770, and that year received a visit from Gray, having a letter of introduction to him. He was accompanied by Dr. Gisborne, Mr. Stonhewer, and Mr. Palgrave, and they walked one after one, in Indian file. When they withdrew, every college man took off his cap as he passed, a considerable number having assembled in the quadrangle to see Mr. Gray, who was seldom seen. I asked Mr. Gray, to the great dismay of his com- panions, what he thought of Mr. Garrick's Jubilee Ode, just published ? He answered, ' He was easily pleased.' " Lord St. Helen's was Minister for some time at the Court of St. Petersburgh, and could recollect in after-life and repeat some interesting anecdotes of the Empress Catherine. He resided and I believe died in Albemarle Street. Mr. Rogers often 444 LETTERS OF pensioner to St. John's, and seems to have all his wits abont him. Your eleve Lord Richard Cavendish, having digested all the learning and all the beef this place could afford him in a two months' residence, is about to leave us, and his little brother George* succeeds him. Bishop Keene has brought a son from Eton to Peter- house ; andDr.Heberdent another to St. John's, speaks of the pleasure he had in his acquaintance, of his visits to Lord St. Helen's house, and of his agreeable and enlightened conversation. In his last illness — moriens legavit — he pre- sented to Mr. Rogers, Pope's own copy of Garth's Dispensary, enriched with the MS. annotations of the younger poet, in his early print-hand. The Ode of Garrick Avas " An Ode on dedicating a building, or erecting a statue, to Shakspere at Stratford-upon-Avon, by D. G." 1769, 4to. and it is bad i nough! * Lord George Augustus Henry, born Feb. 27, 1754, married 1792 Lady Elizabeth Compton, created Earl of Burlington, and died May 9, 1834. f Dr. William Heberden, formerly Fellow of St. John's Col- lege, Cambridge, died in his 91st year in May, 1801, being then Senior Fellow of the College of Physicians. See a good sketch of his life in Nichols's Literary Anecdotes, vol. iii. p. 71-74. He was called by Dr. Johnson " Ultimus Ro- manorum," and his name is immortalized in the poetry of Cow per: " Virtuous and faithful Heberden, whose skill Attempts no task it cannot well fulfil," &c. (lis son, destined to the Church, was Charles, of St. John's College, win) died May, 179G, aged 24. Dr. Heberden, in a THE POET GRAY. 446 who is entered pensioner, and destined to the Church. This is all my university news ; but why do I tell you? come yourself and sec, for I hope you remember your promise at Aston, and will take us in your way as you go to your town residence. You have seen Stonhewer, I imagine, who went northwards on Saturday last; pray tell me how he is, for I think him not quite well. Tell me this, and tell me when I may expect to see you here. I am ever yours, T. G. LETTER CXXXm. REV. WILLIAM MASON TO GRAY. DEAR Mr. GRAY, Curzon Street * March 27. I find from Stonhewer that he has now 129Z. 10s. Qd. as appears by the account on the opposite page ; if therefore it be not inconve- nient to you I should be glad to borrow 100Z. of you for a little pocket-money during the present sequestration of my ecclesiastical and letter to Dr. Birch, introduces Mason to him. " He is of the same college with me, and I have a great esteem for him." Hs was indeed Mason's earliest friend, and patron. * Mason had stayed during the winter at Mr. Stonhewer's house, in Curzon Street, May Fair. 4i0 LETTERS OF temporal concerns.* I wish you would favour me with a line as soon as may he on this matter ; and if you do not object to my pro- posal, I will immediately send you my note, which I have the vanity to presume is as good as my hond. S.f is perfectly well; the fort- night's rest which his feverish complaint ohliged him to take totally removed his other malady, so that he has never had occasion to recur to his former applications, which both you and I thought dangerous, and I always unnecessary. Wilson was with me yesterday ; he has very gladly accepted the tutoring of Mr. Pierse, and will write to Mr. Brown shortly on that sub- ject ; I therefore turn the matter over entirely to him and the master. The general opinion of what will be the business of the dav is, that the Lord Mavorf * I presume that Mason must allude to his expenses at this time, occasioned by his erection of the new rectory house at Aston ; a general account of which extended from December, 1769, to December, 1772. Mason pulled down the old par- sonage, and erected a very handsome and commodious house upon another site, which must have cost a considerable sum of money, as the Archbishop told him, when he visited Aston parish, of which episcopal visit, Mason gives some account in a letter to Horace Walpole. | Mr. Stonhewer. \ " Brass Crosby," who was very popular. See Walpole's George ITT. vol. iv. pp. 195 and 304. Cavendish Debates, THE POET GRAY. 4t7 on account of his gout will not be sent to the Tower, but committed to the care of Bonfoy, whose pizzy-wizzyship will be horribly frighted on the occasion. The riot is. nothing in com- parison of what you would have thought re- spectable when you interested yourself in these matters, and attended them in Bloomsbury Square. I am much amused at present in living privy to a great court secret, known only to myself, the King, and about five or six persons more in the world. I foimd it out by a penetration which would have done honour to a first minister in the best of days, even in the days of Sir Robert* or Fobus. When it is ripe for dis- covery, I shall perhaps let you into some parts of it that will never be made public ; in the meanwhile mum is the word from Your friend and servant, Skroddles. I am glad the Master likes his chairs ; my true love to him. ii. 422, 467. Adolphus's History, i. 469. Belsham's History i. 349. Walpole to Mann, ii. 144. Rockingham Papers, ii. 205, where is some account of him. He is said "for a time to have almost rivalled Wilkes in popularity." * Sir Robert Walpole and Duke of Newcastle. See Lord Holland's character of the Duke of Newcastle in Sehvyn Correspondence, ii. p. 269. 448 LETTERS or Received by Mr. Ston- £ s. d. £ s. d. hewer of Mr. Barber for Mr. Gray 180 14 Paid for Mr. Brown's patent 49 1 6 Given to Mr. Barber . 2 2 51 3 6 Remains . . 129 10 6 LETTER CXXXIV. REV. WILLIAM MASON TO GRAY. DEAR Mr. GRAY, Curzon Street, April 15th, 1771. Stonhewer lias this post received yours, but vou tiffed at him so much in a former letter that you are not to wonder he is backward in answering it ; however, he means to write to you if he survives the next subscription masque- rade, for the superb garniture of which the Adelphi* are now exerting all their powers. * The two brothers, Adams, who built the Adelphi, and, among other things, Lord Bute's house at Luton: the entrance- gate to the Duke of Northumberland's at Si on is also theirs. W;dpole, writing to Mason, says: " Sir William Chambers is not gone away, so I retract all, but that the Adams' ought to he goner Vol. ii. p. 89. TIIK POET OKAY. 449 Lovatini* cannot sing for them to-morrow, and it is thought Mrs. Cornelysf will be happy if they allow her a third underground floor in Durham-yard to hide her diminished head in. Well, and so the great state secret is out, that I and the King knew so well two months ago : but it may be well to inform you, and such rusticated folks as you, that it is not my friend the surveyor Jackson, of Hornby Castle, who is sub-preceptor, but a Jackson of Christ Church. $ * Lovatini enjoyed the public favour for eight years, and left England in 1774. f Mrs. Cornelys established a subscription concert in Soho Square, where the best performers and best company assem- bled; till Bach and Abel uniting interests, in 1765, opened a subscription, about 1763, for a weekly concert, which con- tinued with uninterrupted prosperity for twenty years. See Burney's Hist, of Music, iv. 676. Previous to Mrs. Cornelys, llickford's dancing school continued the fashionable place for concerts. See Burney, iv. p. 196. Walpole says, in a letter to George Montagu, " Strawberry, with all its painted glass and glitter, looked as gay as Mrs. Cornelys's ball-room." Miscel- laneous Correspondence, v. p. 274. See also Selwyn Corre- spondence, vol. i. p. 340. " Have we not every house open every night, from Cornelys s to Mrs. Holman's?" 1765. Again in p. 360, which mentions the rise of Almack's. See also Walpole and Mason's Coi'resp. vol. ii. p. 153. \ Dr. Cyril Jackson, afterwards Dean of Christ Church. He was sub-preceptor; L. Smelt, the sub-governor; Lord Holdernesse, governor, 1771. See Walpole to Mann, ii. 379. Afterwards the preceptors were Markham and Hurd. See 2 G 450 LETTERS OF My .uncle Powell* may bless his stars that he is removed to Court, for he read such wonderful mathematical lectures there, that if he had gone on a few years longer it is thought St. John's would have been eclipsed by the glories of Peckwater, that Peckwater which, in the days of Roger Paine, was fain to bow even to Trinity. Then what say you of Mr. Smelt ? Is it not a proof that patient merit will buoy up at last ? In a word, did you ever see an arrangement formed upon a more liberal and unministerial ground? To say nothing of the Governor himself, what think you of the pre- ceptor ? Could anything be more to yours and Lord Mansfield's mind ? Pray let me know if the new-married Stephen t chooses to be seller of mild and stale to his royal highness, because I would put his name on the list of the expectants I am to apply for, if agreeable. I have a baker, a locksmith, a drawing-master, a laun- dress, an archbishop's cast-off groom of the chamber, already upon my hands ; you must Walpole's George III. vol. iv. 311, for an account of these appointments. Hurd, in the dates of his Life, p. xii. writes, " Was made preceptor to the Prince of Wales, and his brother Prince Frederic, 5 June, 1776." * On Powell, see Letter lxxxvi. He had been one of the tutors at St. John's College, while Balguy was the other. t Probably alluding to Gray's servant. See p. 459, note. THE POET GRAY. 451 speak in time it' you would have anything, not that I believe there will be a household these several years, even if we were rich enough to pay for one. Lord J. blabbed to Jack Dixon that Dr. Hurd refused, and he blabbed it to Gonld, who will blab it to all the university, and we shall be quite shcnt. Tell Gould,* if he says a word, that Oddyngtont may again become vacant, and I shall certainly serve him as I served him before. Now I thought that Jack Dixon t would have been at Petersburg before he could tell it to anybody, and I did not much mind whether the Czarina knew it or no, for I know she will get out all Jack's secrets in some of their amorous moments. But here am I writing nonsense when I should be thanking you seriously for your 100Z., and sending you your security. Voila done : here it is, tear it otf and put it in your§ [strong-box]. You say nothing of coming up, and Palgrave affects not to come up till the beginning of * " My service to creeping Gain (I do not mean Mr. Gould); I hope it has conceived vast hopes from the smiles of his grace." Nicholls to Gray, Works, vol. v. p. 97. f The living before alluded to, which was in Mr. Mason's gift, as Precentor of York Cathedral. \ A relation of Mason's; mentioned in Mason's will. § Torn out. 2 g 2 452 LETTERS OE May. I will press neither of you, I know you both too well. As to myself, I mean to fly northward by the way of Northamptonshire ; and poor Hoyland* comes Zephyris et Sirundine * This was the Francis Hoyland whose Poems were pub- lished in 1763, 4to. and subsequently reprinted, with much alteration, in his edition of the English Poets, 1808, by Mr. Thomas Parke (The Poetical Works of the Eev. Mr. Hoyland, collated with the best editions). Horace Walpole, in a letter to Mason, of May, 1769, says, " When I see Mr. Stonhewer I will know if he will choose another edition of poor Mr. Hoy- land 's Poems. I doubt not, as when he sent for the last twenty he said he believed he could get them off. I gladly adopt your correction, but I cannot further your own good- ness. It is to yon, Sir, Mr. Hoyland owes everything." See also Mason's letter, p. 8. The edition from the Strawberry Hill Press of Hoyland's Poems was printed in 1769. In 1783 appeared Odes by the Rev. F. Hoyland, Edinb. 4to, with the following motto in the title-page : — Sa?pe manus demens, studiis irata sibique Misit in arsuros carmina nostra focos. Atque ita de multis quoniam non multa supemxnt, Cum venia, facito, quisquis es, ista legi. Ovid. This edition contains four Odes. 1. From the French of Fenelon. 2. The Dove. 3. An Autumnal Ode. And Ode Four, the Ode to the Guardian Angel, much altered from the edition of 1763, in the Strawberry Hill edition, 1769. Eural Happiness, an Elegy in the first edition, is called an Ode in that of 1769. In the edition of his poems, 1822, is a brief Memoir by THE POET GRAY. 453 prima; but as it snows at present you will think, perhaps, to find me here in June, and perhaps you may. Well ! do your pleasure; and believe me ever yours, W. M. Congratulate me on the cessation of all my fears about kitchen- garden walls, &c. ; it is an ill wind that blows nobody profit. R. A. Davenport. From this we learn that Hoyland was born previous to 1725 ; that he was Bachelor of Arts, probably of Cambridge ; that he was married, and had a child. Patronage, for which he had often prayed, he at length obtained; but he gave us to understand that it was burthened with conditions by which it was rendered a curse. It is obvious, from his own language, that his promotion, whatever it was, made him a dependent, and that to some one who exacted his full share of homage, if not of servility. Mr. Davenport was at a loss to know by what means Hoy- land's poems acquired a typographical distinction (he means at the Strawberry Hill press) which was so seldom granted. The title-page to the first edition was as follows : — Poems and Translations by Francis Hoyland, A.B. Nasutum volo, nolo polyposum. (Martial.) Give me a house like other people, Not one as large as Strasburg steeple. (Printed for London and York), 1763. (Two Shillings). 454 LETTERS OF LETTER CXXXV. to the rev. james brown. Dear Sir, I am sorry to think you are coming to town at a time when I am ready to leave it ; but so it must he, for here is a son born unto us, and he must die a heathen without your assistance; Old Pa. is in waiting ready to receive you at your landing. Mason set out for Yorkshire this morning. Delaval is by no means well, and looks sadly, yet he goes about and talks as loud as ever ; he fell upon me tooth and nail (but in a very friendly manner) only on the credit of the newspaper, for he knows nothing further ; told me of the obloquy that waits for me ; and said everything to deter me from doing a thing that is already done. Mason sat by and heard it all with a world of complacency. You see the determination of a majority of fifty-four, only two members for counties among them. It is true that Luttrell was insulted, and even struck with a flambeau, at the door of the House of Commons on Friday night; but he made no disturbance, and got away. How he will appear in public I do not conceive. Great disturbances are expected, and I think THE POET GRAY. 455 with more reason than ever. Petitions to Par- liament, well-attended, will (I suppose) be the first step, and next, to the King to dissolve the present Parliament. I own I apprehend the event whether the mob or the army are to get the better. You will wish to know what was the rea< state of things on the hearse-day : * the driver, I hear, was one Stevenson, a man who lets out carriages to Wilkes's party, and is worth money. Lord ■ was not rolled in the dirt, nor struck, nor his staff broken, but made the people a speech, and said he would down on his knees to them if they would but disperse and be quiet. They asked him whether he would stand on his head for them, and begun to shoulder him, but he retired among the sol- diers. Sir Ar. Gilmour received a blow, and * A hearse drawn by two black and two white horses, and hung with escutcheons representing the death of Clarke at Brentford and of Allen in St. George's Fields, appeared in the streets, and was drawn to the gates of St. James's, where the attendant mob hissed and insulted all who entei'ed the court. Earl Talbot took courage and went down with his white staff, which was soon broken in his hand. He seized one man, and fourteen more of the rioters were made prisoners. The Duke of Northumberland was very ill treated, dkc. S< e Walpole's Memoirs of George III. iii. -'i'>3; see also Lord Mahon's History, vol. v. p. 846. t56 LETTERS OF seized the man who struck him, but the fellow fell down and was hustled away among the legs of the mob. At Bath House a page came in to his mistress, and said, he was afraid Lord Bath did not know what a disturbance there was below; she asked him if "the honse was on fire?" he said "No; but the mob were forcing into the court :" she said " Is that all ; well I will go and look at them :" and actually did so from some obscure window. When she was satisfied, she said, " When they are tired of bawling I suppose they will go home." Mr. Ross, a merchant,* was very near mur- dered, as the advertisement sets forth, by a man with a hammer, who is not yet discovered, in spite of the 600/. reward. I stay a week longer. Adieu : I am, ever yours, * The Treasury offered a reward of 500Z. for discovering the person who, at the procession of the merchants, had with n hammer broken the chariot of one Eoss, an aged merchant, and wounded him in several places. See Walpole's George III. iii. p. 354. THE POET OKAY. 457 LETTER CXXXVL* REV. DR. BROWN TO THE REV. NORTON NICHOLLS. DEAR Sill, Pembroke Hall, July 26, 1771. I am writing to you in Mr. Gray's room, and he is ill upon the couch, and unable to write to you himself. His illness is something like the gout in the stomach, but as Dr. Glynn tells me there are many different degrees of that disorder we may hope this is one of the less dangerous degrees, and that we shall see him well again in a short time. The last night passed over tolerably well, but this morning, after drinking asses-milk, the sickness at the stomach has re- turned again. Mr. Gray has received from you one letter from Paris, dated June 29, and he has sent you a letter from Mr. Temple inclosed in a very short one from himself. You will give me leave to add my best compliments to you, and hearty wishes for your health, and, * These and the five following letters are directed to Mr. Norton Nicholls of Bkindeston. The letter that concludes the volume, from Dr. Wharton to Mason, has not been previously printed. Mr. Brown's Correspondence with Dr. Wharton, during Gray's last illness, may be found in the four volume? of Gray's Works, pp. 202, 223; and see Horace Walpole's Miscellaneous Letters, vol. v. p. 318. 458 LETTERS OF when there happens a vacancy in your conver- sation with Mr. Bonstetten, tell him that I do myself the honour to think of him often with esteem and admiration, and wish him well.* I am, your faithful humble servant, J. Brown. LETTER CXXXVI. REV. DR. BROWN TO THE REV. NORTON NICHOLLS. DEAR SlR, Pembroke Hall, Aug. 1, 1771. The night before last, between the 30th and 31st of July, about eleven o'clock, we lost Mr. Gray. My former letter would give you some apprehensions, but we did not think this sad event to be so near. He had frequently con- vulsion fits from the time I wrote to you till the time of his death ; and the physicians thought he was past the sense of pain some hours before he died. On the Saturday he told me where to find his will if there should be occasion. I did not imagine then there would be occasion to look for it ; and he saidno more to me upon that subject. He told Miss Antrobus he should die ; and now and then some short * See Appendix. THE POET GKAV. 459 expressions of this kind came from him, but lie expressed not the least uneasiness at the thoughts of leaving this world. He has left all his books to Mr. Mason ; and his papers of all kinds and writings to be destroyed or preserved at his discretion.* His legacies are to Miss Antrobus and her sister, to Mr. Wil- liamson of Calcutta, to Lady Goring, to Mr. Stonhewer, and Dr. Wharton. He has joined me in the executorship with Mr. Mason; his scrutoire hath not yet been examined, but upon opening it for the will, I observed a parcel sealed up and indorsed, " Papers belonging to Mr. Nicholls," which we shall take care of. Your last letter came too late for him either to read or to hear; I have it by me unopened, and will take care of it. Mr. Bon- stetten will be much grieved. Adieu ! we shall miss him greatly. Cambridge will appear a very different place to you when you come * The following is an extract from the Obituary in the Gentleman's Magazine, August 6, 1771: — "The remains of the late celebrated Mr. Gray, author of the Elegy in a Country Churchyard, a were, agreeably to his will, interred at Windsor. He has, among other legacies, left a pension to an old faithful servant named Stephen, who has lived with him several years." ! ! a See Appendix IV. -460 LETTERS OF again. I am, with my best wishes for your health, Your faithful humble servant, James Brown. LETTER CXXXVIIL REV. DR. BROWN TO THE REV. NORTON NICHOLLS. DEAR SlR, Pembroke HaU, Sept. 6, 1771. I thought it might be some satisfaction for you to know that I had disposed of the letter you mentioned according to your desire. You expressed yourself in the singular number. I have seven or eight others by me, several of which I have read in company with Mr. Gray, but be assured they are sacred. I have looked into none of them but with him, and shall still observe the same restraint. They may be kept till you come, or otherwise disposed of as you shall direct. I have received a letter lately from Mr. Mason. Mr. Grav, vou know, made memorandums in his pocket-books of his trans- actions. In that for 1770, March 23, Mr. Mason tells me there is this memorandum : " Lent Mr. de Bonstetten 201. ;" and it appears further THE POET GRAY. 461 to be the day he set out for Dover. I venture to mention this to you as it makes a part of our charge ; and perhaps it may he the best oppor- tunity we shall have of hearing from Mr. de Bonstetten how that matter stands. You will act in that matter as you please. No successor to Mr. Gray is yet appointed. Mr. Symonds* has been most mentioned ; I believe indeed he does not himself apply for it, which makes his success the more unlikely. I shall rejoice to see you, and to see you well. I am your faithful humble servant, James Brown. LETTER CXXXIX. REV. DR. BROWN TO THE REV. NORTON NICHOLLS. DEAR SlR, June 29, 1773. I received vour letter in London : it is dated May 21st, and I thought it a little unlucky that it came not to my hands before I left Cambridge, which was not till the 25th. I might then have delivered the parcel myself to * John Symonds, M.A. of St. John's College, succeeded to the Professorship in 1771, which he held till 1807. 462 LETTERS OF Mr. Turner. I have now sent it by Mr. Gillam, and put it into his hands yesterday. He is a trusty assent, otherwise I should have thought vour direction to Mr. Turner rather too concise. ■ Amongst Mr. Gray's things we found some little presents for his friends, which they might esteem as memorials of him ; for some of his friends I mean. Mr. de Bonstetten had sent him from Paris a little picture of himself; we thought it would be acceptable to you, and therefore, with Mr. Mason's full approbation, it is sent, and makes a part of your parcel. There are those of your letters which we found, but the two or three jorumals you speak of are not there, unless possibly they may be inclosed in the parcel sealed. Excuse me that I send no directions about the 20Z. You have wrote to Mr. de Bonstetten, who will mention it, if he be as we imagine. I met Mr. Barrett* twice in my walks in London, and should not have known him the first time had he not been kind enough to know me. I was pleased to see him look so well. You will easily know what was the sub- ject of our discourse whilst we stood together. I believe I was sitting by Mr. Gray at the time he wrote you his last letter to Paris, without * Mr. Barrett, of Lee Priory, near Canterbury. THE POET GRAY. 463 feeling- what it seems he suggested to you — how near he was to his end. It gives me a melan- choly kind of satisfaction that my letters could be at all useful to you. The report you men- tion, I believe, was never uttered in England. Pray let me know when you receive your parcel. I am, with my best wishes for your health, and with much esteem, Your faithful humble servant, J. Brown. LETTER CXL. REV. DR. BROWN TO THE REV. NORTON NICHOLLS. DEAR SlR, Gibside, July 24, 1773. I received voiu- letter at York, where I was upon a visit to Mr. Mason, who is at this time in residence there. As to the 20£., we were both of the same opinion, that it will be better to stay till Mr. de Bonstetten writes either to you or to one of the executors, and the rather because in case of any accident to Mr. de Bonstetten your payment to us will be no discharge for yourself against any claims which his executors might make. Mr. Mason desired his respectful com- 464 LETTERS OF pliments to you. The Life proceeds well; it promises to be useful aud entertaining. It will consist of five or six sections ; the first of them relates to his acquaintance with Mr. West, and will contain some extracts of letters and poems both Latin and English, and goes to the time of his going abroad with Mr. Walpole. I am much obliged to you for your kind invitations, and shall be very glad of the opportunity of seeing you whenever it so happens at Cambridge or in Suffolk. Pray make my compliments to your mother. I wish her joy of your safe return. I am, with great respect, Your faithful humble servant, J. Brown. LETTER CXLI. DR. WHARTON TO THE REV. WILLIAM MASON. SlR, Old Park, near Darlington, May 29, 1781. I received the favour of your present yester- day. You will suffer me to acknowledge that I am particularly pleased with the elegant com- pliment you pay to the memory of Mr. Gray. I remember he said that the merit of his own to that of Shakespeare consisted in the novelty THE POET GRAY. U\~> of it, because it is difficult to invent anything new upon such subjects. The Sonnet has the same merit, and I am certain is of that kind which while he was upon earth would have pleased his ear. You will now listen for the public judgment; I mean as a satisfaction to your curiosity, for 1 can by no means admit it as a decision of the merits. I yet reflect with pain upon the cool reception which those noble odes, The Progress of Poetry and The Bard, met with at their first publication ; it appeared that there were not twenty people in England who liked them. I expect to see my nephew shortly, when our conversations upon the subject of your poems will be renewed. He will always give me plea- sure when he can assure me you enjoy that happiness which ought to be the lot of wise and oood men. Give me leave to mention Mr. Gray once more ; it was one of his favourite maxims that employment is happiness ; surely we may add, that the more elegant the employ- ment is, the more refined must be the hap- piness. I am, Sir, your most obliged and Obedient humble servant, Thomas Wharton. 2 H APPENDIX. APPENDIX I. (See page 104.) Gray's Remarks on the Letters prefixed to Mason's Elfrida.— See Mason's Works, vol. ii. p. 177 — 193, and Gray's Letters, vol. iv. p. 1, ed. Aid. LETTER I. Dear sir — very bad; I am yours — equally bad: it is impos- sible to conciliate these passages to nature and Aristotle. " Allowed to modem caprice.'''' — It is not caprice but good sense that made these alterations in the modern drama. A greater liberty in the choice of the fable and the conduct of it was the necessary consequence of retrenching the Chorus. Love and tenderness delight in privacy. The soft effusions of the soul, Mr. Mason, will not bear the presence of a gaping, singing, dancing, moralising, uninteresting crowd: and not love alone, but every passion, is checked and cooled by this fiddling crew. How could Macbeth and his wife have laid the design for Duncan's murder? What could they have said to each other in the hall at midnight not only if a chorus but if a single mouse had been stirring there ? Could Hamlet have met the Ghost or taken his mother to task in their company ? If Othello had said a harsh word to his wife before them, would they not have danced to the window and called the watch ? The ancients were perpetually crossed and harassed by the necessity of using the Chorus, and, if they have done wonders 2 H 2 468 APPENDIX. notwithstanding this clog, sure I am they would have per- formed still greater wonders without it. For the same reason we may be allowed to admit of more intrigue in our drama, to bring about a great action — it is often an essential requisite ; and it is not fair to argue against this liberty for that misuse of it which is common to us, and was formerly so with the French, namely, the giving into a silly intricacy of plot, in imitation of the Spanish dramas. We have also, since Charles the Second's time, imitated the French (though but awk- Avardly) in framing scenes of mere insipid gallantry; but these were the faults of the writers and not of the art, which enables us, with the help of a little contrivance, to have as much love as we please, without playing the petits maitres or building labyrinths. I forgot to mention that Comedy continued to be an odd sort of farce, very like those of the Italian theatre, till the Chorus was dismissed, when nature and Menander brought it into that beautiful form which we find in Terence. Tragedy was not so happy till modern times. II. I do not admit that the excellences of the French writers are measured by the verisimilitude or the regularities of their dramas only. Nothing in them, or in our own, even Shak- spere himself, ever touches us, unless rendered verisimile, which, by good management, may be accomplished even in such absurd stories as the Tempest, the witches in Macbeth, or the fairies in the Midsummer Night's Dream ; and I know not of any writer that has pleased chiefly in proportion to his regularity. Other beauties may, indeed, be heightened and Bet ofF by its means, but of itself it hardly pleases at all. Venice Preserved or Jane Shore are not so regular as the Orphan, or Tamerlane, or Lady Jane Grey. A.PPENDIX. -Mil) III. Modem Melpomene. — Here are we got into our tantarems! It is certain that pure poetry inay be introduced without any Chorus. I refer you to a thousand passages of mere description in the Iambic parts of Greek tragedies, and to ten thousand in Shakspere, who is moreover particularly admirable in his introduction of pure poetry, so as to join it with pure passion, and yet keep close to nature. This he could accomplish with passions the most violent and transporting, and this any good writer may do with passions less impetuous; for it is nonsense to imagine that tragedy must throughout be agitated with the furious passions, or attached by the tender ones: the greater part of it must often- be spent in a preparation of these passions, in a gradual working them up to the light, and must thus pass through a great many cooler scenes and a variety of nuances, each of which will admit of a proper degree, of poetry, and some the purest poetry. Nay, the boldest metaphors, and even description in its strongest colour- ing, are the naUiral expression of some passions, even in then- greatest agitation. As to moral reflections, there is sufficient room for them in those cooler scenes that I have mentioned, and they make the greatest ornaments of those parts, that is to say, if they are well joined with the character. If not, they had better be left to the audience than put into the mouths of a set of professed moralists, who keep a shop of sentences and reflections (I mean the Chorus), whether they be sages, as you call them, or young girls that learnt them by heart out of their samples and primers. There is nothing ungracious or improper in Jane Shore's reflections on the fate of women, but just the contrary, only that they are in rhyme; and, in like manner, it is far from a beautiful variety when the Chorus makes a transition 470 APPENDIX. in the from plain iambics to high-flown lyric thoughts, expressions, and numbers, and, when their vagaries are over, relapse again into common sense and conversation. A con- fidante in skilful hands might be a character, and have both sense and dignity. That in Maffei's Merope has as much as any Chorus. The Greeks might sing better than the French, but I'll be burnt if they danced with more grace, expression, or even pathos. Yet who ever thought of shedding tears at a French opera? IV. If modern music cannot, as you say, express poetry, it is not a perfection, but a deterioration. You might as well say that the perfectionnement of poetry would be the rendering it incapable of expressing the passions. APPENDIX II.— (See page 360.) The following Letter to the Printer of " The St. James's Chronicle" is ascribed to Mr. Archdeacon Black- burne, on the authority of the late Mr. Lockyer Davis, who was deep in the secrets of that respectable literary j ournal. (Nichols's Literary Illustrations, vol. iii. p. 715—718.) " SlR, Thursday, October 16, 1766. " There is a tribute of candid report due to the memory of men of genius and learning, how unfortunate soever they may have been in the application of their talents, or however they may have fallen short of that approbation which the publick has given to men of much inferior abilities, at the same time APPENDIX. 471 that it hath been denied to them. I would endeavour to apply this reflection to the case of the unhappy Leucophaeus,* who has just finished his mortal course in a way which some people may think has fully justified the world in the unfa- vourable sentiments that were so generally entertained of his literary conduct. Leucophaeus is now out of the reach of every man's resentment, as well as of every man's envy ; and I would willingly hope, that a few dispassionate reflections upon his fortunes and his fate, from a person who knew some- thing of him at different times of his life, may not be offensive to those who have candour enough to make the requisite allowances for errors and frailties, which have been excused in others who had but a small portion of his merit to qualify them. Merit he certainly had, and merit will be allowed him by the capable readers, even of such of his writings as convey the most striking idea of the author's mental infirmities. " Few men have given earlier proofs of capacity and erudi- tion than Leucophaaus. His rising genius was marked and distinguished by the tendered patronage of some who had gained, and of others who thought they were gaining, the summit of fame in the republic of letters. With certain of the latter Leucophaeus entered into the most intimate connection, upon the assurance of being conducted, in virtue of that alliance, to as much reputation, and as great a proportion of emolument, as he had reason to look for. A fatal step! which he never afterward could retrieve, when he most desired it. Had he preserved his independency, he had preserved his probity and honour; but he had parts, and he had ambition. The former might have eclipsed a jealous competition for fame; the latter laid him open to practices proper to prevent it. No arts or allurements were omitted to attach him to a * The learned but unhappy Dr. John Brown; of whom &ee Nichols's " Literary Anecdotes," vol. ii. p. '211. 172 avpkndix. party, which easily found the means to consign him to con- tempt the moment it was suspected that he was uneasy in hi> bonds, and that he was meditating expedients to break them. " An intimate friend spent a long evening with him, when he was literally on the road to his ruin;* that is to say, when he was going to confirm and cultivate the alliance above- mentioned. Leucophaeus's prospects were then talked over. He was warned to be aware of consequences; but the con- nection was formed, and must be adhered to ; and they who had heard Leucophaeus harangue on that occasion, concerning the world with which he was going to engage, and concerning what would become him in his commerce with it, would have sworn that nothing could surprise his prudence, nothing pervert his integrity. " Splendid and decorated guide-posts, promising straight and easy roads, often stand at the head of dirty, crooked lanes. These were pointed out to Leucophaeus at his first setting for- wards. He soon found them fallacious indexes : he had the satisfaction, however, to have one example immediately before him, that shewed how well it might be worth the while of an aspirant to turn and wind about, and even to be a little bemired, in order to come at a comfortable lodging, clean linen, and a complete change of raiment. " But these were blessings which were not intended for Leucophaeus. The tempter could have given the clue, which would have led his pupil through all difficulties ; but that might have spoiled his own game. He contented himself therefore with escorting Leucophaeus to the thickest of the filth, and there he fairly left him to the scorn and derision of lookers-on; calmly observing, with a shrug, 'If a man will expose himself, who can help it ?' It happened, however, that * Alluding, perhaps, to his poem prefixed to Pope's Works, or his " Essays on the Characteristics." APPENDIX. 473 out of this piteous condition Leucophaeus emerged, and with that vigour as in a great measure to recover his estimation. And here the tempter saiv it necessary to strike; in again. A little coaxing procured an act of oblivion for one of the crudest insults that could be offered to an ingenuous mind; and to shew the sincerity of his reconciliation, the first thing Leuco- phams did was to disfigure one of his capital performances, by copying the ungracious manner of the Grand Examplar. " At what period Leucophseus lost himself with the publick every one knows. At the same instant was he deserted by the alliance; and so apprehensive were they lest he should once more find such encouragement for his powers as might throw their importance into obscurity, that some pains were taken to have one door of preferment shut against him, even where the recommendation of the alliance would have been of no service to him had it been kept open. But they succeeded; and in that success added one more to the many instances upon record, of the power and proclivity of many a man to do mis- chief, where he has neither the power nor the inclination to do good. Certain fragments in the last thing* Leucophaeus committed to the press, throw some faint light upon this part of his history. " Leucopha'us now found himself in a wide world, at enmity with him on every side. What was he to do ? Should he return to the paths of truth and probity, to Avhich he had been so long a stranger? Alas! his credit, his weight was gone. His early connections had left a stain upon his character, which the after-conduct of an angel could hardly have discharged from the minds of honest men. It appeared by some very remarkable evidence that he was suspected to be the scout of the alliance, even to the very last. It has since appeared that his most zealous remonstrances against the imputation could * " Thoughts on Civil Liberty, Licentiousness, and Faction." 47Ji APPENDIX. not perfectly clear him of that suspicion. What remained then for him, but to do — what numbers (perhaps a majority) of his brethren had done before him — what his original patrons and conductors were then doing — what the dexterous part of mankind generally find their account in doing ? — In one word, he temporized, but with this difference from the calmer speculators of the ground before them — he made his evolutions too quick and visible. Unhappily for him, the changes in the upper regions were frequent, sudden, and un- foreseen. To these he accommodated himself without hesita- tion ; and it was impossible that so immediate and so nimble transitions in so conspicuous a character, should not give the cue to the publick to mark Mm, rather than an hundred others, who really temporized no less than he, but who had the dis- cretion not to notify it upon paper, or (if that was unavoidable in an occasional sermon or so) who had the art to balance so cleverly as to leave matters in that sort of see-saw way, which affords the publick no clear indications of their present attach- ments. — Common fame says, that the last effort of Leuco- phceus's genius was a panegyric on the Earl of Chatham.* This, probably, the sad catastrophe of the author broke off abruptly ; otherwise the publick had been favoured with it ere this. What the brotherhood in general think of the noble Earl, we shall hardly be informed in print before the end of January. Such is the difference between impetuosity and discretion in committing the same sin. " The last province allotted to Leucophagus was of a sort which implied a civil dismission from all his expectations at home. It is said to have been planned in a consultation of casuists, upon the same considerations which induce physicians to send their patients to Bath, when they chuse not to be longer troubled with their hypochondriacal complaints in * See Dr. Brown's " Estimate," vol. ii. APPENDIX. 475 town. Leucophaeus was evidently contemptuously, unaccountably neglected; and the publick was eternally asking Why? He was a temporizer. What then? is not temporizing the cardinal virtue of the age ? is it not almost the singular merit of that class of men to which Leucophaeus belonged ? To whomso- ever his trimming character was obnoxious, it should not have been so to those who denounce utter exclusion against all who are inflexibly tenacious of unpolite truths. Is an obsequious blockhead a greater credit to the cause he espouses, or a greater ornament to the master who employs him, than an obsequious genius ? No. But the former will be quiet, every way quiet ; and geniuses are apt to speculate, and speculation is apt to run foul of system, and to do mischief, even where the meaning is good enough. Aye, there was the rnb ; Leuco- phaeus speculated once upon a time * on his quiet brethren, in the midst of their repose ; and for this he has ever since been called an impudent writer. . But has it been duly considered in what respectable school he learned his impudence? Did he bring anything from that school but his impudence? And why should not impudence do as much for him as it has done for — others ? So reasoned the publick. And they who perhaps would not have employed Leucophasus, where an honester man was to be had, could suggest no reason to themselves why he should not be employed by those who were no honester than himself. At length the dispute is ended. An ofEce was contrived which would answer the highest demands of his ambition. He was to be the Solomon to a Queen of Sheiba.^ A little solemn grimace in the quarter where it was first pro- posed drew him in to act his part in this egregious farce. Of all men upon earth, Leucophaeus was the last to suspect design, when anything was said to his advantage. Compli- ments on this occasion were not spared ; and as they came * Dr. Brown's "Estimate, ,- vol. i. f Empress of Russia. 17H APPENDIX. from the white-bearded iellow,* no gull was suspected. In- toxicated with this prospect, he became, what his insidious coaxers wanted him — perfectly ridiculous. After some time the loudness of the laugh roused him from his reverie. The length of the nap had sobered him. He inquired seriously of those who knew the best where all this was to end, and — behold! it was all a dream. The reflection was too much for the feeling, indignant spirit of LeucophEeus. A speedy end was put to it by an act of desperation, for which perhaps, at the final day of account, not Leucophajus alone shall be answerable. " 1 am, Sir, your humble servant, " ^Eacus." APPENDIX III.— (See page 458.) The sudden intimacy and almost romantic attachment of Gray to Bonstetten is so curious as to make some account of him not unacceptable, especially as his name is but little known in England. Charles von Bonstetten was Baillie of Nion, in the canton of Berne in Switzerland. When young, and his father still alive, he came and resided for a short time at Cambridge. He first appears in a letter to Mr. Nicholls, G January, 1770, in which he describes his pur- suing his studies with Gray. " I am in a hurry from morning till evening. At eight o'clock I am roused by a young square- cap, with whom I follow Satan through chaos and night.f He explained me in Greek and Latin ' the sweet, reluctant, amorous delays ' of our grandmother Eve. YVe finish our travels in a copious breakfast of muffins and tea. Then appear * Dr. Wail miton. t That is, he read Milton V Paradise Lost. APPENDIX. 477 Shakspere and old Linnaeus,* struggling together as two ghosts Avould do for a damned soul. Sometimes the one got the better, sometimes the other. Mr. Gray, whose acquaintance is my greatest debt to you, is so good as to show me Macbeth, and all witches, beldames, ghosts, and spirits, whose language I never could have understood without his interpretation. I am now endeavouring to dress all these people in a French dress, which is a very hard labour. I am afraid to take a room, which Mr. Gray shall keep much better," &c. To this letter of young Bonstetten Gray has added the following post- script: — " 1 never saw such a boy; our breed is not made on this model. He is busy from morning to night; has no other amusement than that of changing one study for another ; likes nobody that he sees here, and yet wishes to stay longer, though he has passed a whole fortnight with us already. His letter has had no correction whatever, and is prettier by half than English." In the next letter, March 20, 1770, Gray writes — " On Wednesday next I go (for a few days) with Mons. de Bonstetten to London. His father will have him home in the autumn, and he must pass through France to improve his talents and morals. He goes from Dover on Friday. I have seen (I own) with pleasure the eiforts you have made to recommend me to him, sed non ego credulus Mis, nor, I fear, he neither. He gives me too much pleasure, and at least an equal share of inquietude. You do not understand him so well as I do ; but I leave my meaning imperfect till Ave meet. I have never met with so extraordinary a person. God bless him! I am unable, to talk to you about anything else, I think." The 4th April, 1770, P. Hall:— "At length, my dear sir, we have lost our poor De Bonstetten. I packed him * Gray's copy of Linnaeus, which in his later years was always on the table, and which was filled with his notes and pen-and-ink drawings, being interleaved for that purpose. It was sold with his other books. 478 APPENDIX. up with my own hands in the Dover machine at four o'clock on the morning of Friday, 23rd March. The next day at seven he sailed, and reached Calais at noon, and Boulogne at night. he next night he reached Abbeville, where he had letters to Madame Vanrobais, to whom belongs the famous manufacture of cloth there. From thence he wrote to me; and here am I again to pass my solitary evenings, which hung much Lighter on my hands before I knew him. This is your fault! Pray let the next you send be halt and blind, dull, unapprehensive, and wrongheaded. For there (as Lady Con- stance says) ' was never such a gracious creature born:'' and yet — but no matter. Burn my letter that I wrote you, for I am very much out of humour with myself, and will not believe a word of it. You will think I have caught madness from him (for he is certainly mad), and perhaps you will be right." Bonstetten is mentioned in three subsequent letters; and in one from Mr. Nicholls, in January, 1771, it would appear as if Cray had meant to visit him at Berne (see Correspondence, p. 122); and in March Bonstetten entreats Gray and Nicholls, a deux genoux, to come (p. 130). Gray's health began to fail in the spring of this the last year of his life, and Nicholls took his journey alone in June. The last mention of Bonstetten was in a letter of Gray, 3rd May, when he was yet uncertain whether or not to venture abroad, and asking Nicholls to stay a week or fortnight for his determina- tion. In it he says, " Three days ago I had so strange a letter from Bonstetten, I hardly know how to give you any account of it, and desire you will not speak of it to anybody. That he has been ' le plus malheureux des hommes ;' that he has ' decide a emitter sa pays,' that is, to pass the next winter in England; that he cannot bear ' la morgne de l'aristocratie et l'orgueil arine des loix:' in short, strongly expressive of uneasiness and confusion of mind, so as to talk of ' un pistolet ' APPENDIX. 470 and 'du courage,' and all without, the shadow of a reason assigned; and so he leaves me. He is either disordered in his intellect (which is too possible), or has done some strange thing which has exasperated his whole family and friends at home, which (I'm afraid) is equally possible. I am quite at a loss about it. You will see and know more ; but by all means curb these vagaries and wandering imaginations, if there be any room for counsels," &c. Three letters from G ray to Bonstetten, in April and May, 1770, are printed in Gray's Works, ed. Aid. vol. iv. p. 179, which are taken from an edition of Mathison's Letters translated and published by Miss Plumtree in 1799. By the advertisement to the work it appears that Mason's application to Bonstetten for these letters met with a refusal. Mathison had alluded to Bon- stetten under the name of Agathon in his stanzas on the Leman Lake: — When Agathon, the Muses', Greece's pride, The palace's delight, the peasant's stay, E'en here, to distant Jura's shaggy side, In warmest friendship clasp'd me as his Gray. in the year 1822, when I was in Switzerland, the Hon. YV. Ward, who was there at the same time, informed me that lie called on Bonstetten, who said to him that " Gray took lodgings for me at Cambridge, and I used to visit him in the evening, and read classical authors with him ;" and nothing more was ob- tained from him. Bonstetten died at Genoa, Feb. 1832, aged 87. He was author of several works, as " Letters on the Pas- toral Poets of Switzerland;" " The Hermit," an Alpine tale, 1787; on Education at Berne, 1786; and others better known, as " L'Homme du Midi et l'Homme du Nord," and " Les Six derniers Livres de 1'iEneide." Some account of him may be found in the Autobiography of Sir Egerton Badges, vol. i. 480 APPENDIX. pp. 117, 330, and Restituta, iii. 542, and in the Biographie des Hommes Vivans. The year before M. Bonstetten died (1831) he wrote a little work called " Souvenirs de Chevalier Victor de Bonstetten," in which a curious and interesting account of Gray's life is to be found, and which forms a very good commentary on the previous narrative. " Dix-huit ans avant mon sejour a Nyon, j'avais passe quelques mois a Cambridge avec le celebre poete Gi'ay, presque dans la meme intimite qu'avec Mathison, mais avec cette difference, que Gray avait trente ans plus que moi, et Mathison seize de moins. Ma gaiete, mon amour pour la poe'sie Angloise, que je lisait avec Gray, l'avaient comme subjugue, de maniere que la difference de nos ages n'etait plus sentie par nous. J'etais loge a Cambridge dans un cafe, voisin du Pembroke Hall. Gray y vivait enseveli dans une espece du cloitre, d'ou le quinzieme siecle n'avait pas encore demenage. La ville de Cambridge avec ses colleges solitaires n'etait qu'une reunion de couvens, ou les mathematiques, et quelques sciences, ont pris la forme et le costume de la theologie du moyen age. De beaux couvens a longs et silencieux corridores, des solitaires en robes noirs, des jeunes seigneurs travestis en moines, a bonnets carres, portant des souvenirs des moines a cote de la gloire de Newton. Aucune femme honnete ne venait e'gayer la vie de ces rats de livres a forme humaine. Le savoir prosperait quelque- fois dans le desert du coeur. Tel j'ai en Cambridge en 1769. Quel contraste de habit de Cray a Cambridge avec cette de Mathison a Nyon. Gray en se condamnant a vivre a Cam- bridge, oubliait que le genie du poete languit dans la seche- resse du coeur. Le genie poetique de Gray etait tellement eteint dans le sombre manoir de Cambridge, que le souvenir de ses poesies lui etaient odieux. II ne permit jamais de lui en parler. Quand je lui citais quelques vers de lui, il se lui fait comme un enfant obstine. Je hu disais quelquefois, ' Voulez vous bien me APPENDIX. 481 repondre?' Mais aucune parole ne sort ait de sa bouche. Je le voyais tous les soirs, de cinque heures a minuit. Nous lisions Shakspere, qu'il adoroit, Dryden, Pope, Milton, &c. ; et nos conversations, comme celle de 1'amitie, n'arrivaient jamais a la derniere pen see. Je racontrai a Gray ma vie et mon pays ; mais toute sa vie a lui etait fermee pour moi. Jamais il ne me parlait de lui. II y avait chez Gray, entre le present et le passe, un abime infranchisable. Quand je voulais un approche, de sombres nuees venaient le couvrir. Je cms que Gray n'avait jamais airne; c'etait le mot de l'enigme, et en etait resulte une misere de cceur, qui faisait contraste avec son imagination ardente et profonde, que, au lieu de faire le bonheur de sa vie, n'etait que le tourment. Gray avait la gaiete dans l'esprit, et de la melancolie dans le caractere. Mais cette melancolie n'est qu'un besoin non satisfait de la sensibilite. Chez Gray elle tenait au genre de vie de son ame ardente, releguee sous le pole arctique de Cambridge." " Mr. Miller, who was curator of the physic garden at Cambridge, gave lectures on botany and on Linnaeus to a Mons. Bonstetten, who studied at Cambridge for some months in a house opposite Pembroke Hall, where he lodged, chiefly on account of the vicinity to Mr. Gray of Pembroke, who had brought him from London to Cambridge. He was a most studious young gentleman, of a most amiable figure, and was son to the treasurer of the canton of Berne in Switzerland, whither he returned in March, 1770, on his leaving Cam- bridge, through Paris, not staying at London above a day or two. Mr. Miller read lectures to him to the very last day of his being at Cambridge." — Coll. for Athena? Cantabrigienses, by Cole. There is an anecdote of Bonstetten while he was staying at Madame de Staei's house at Coppet in the Memoires de Jo- sephine, p. 106; and Bonstetten gives an account of his friend 482 APPENDIX. Mathison's life certainly very difFerent from that of Gray: " Apres diner, il s'evadait furtivement pour faire de la poe'sie d'araour, avec quelque aimable et jeune personne." The description, however, of his apartment at the end of the gallery of the old chateau at Nion is very pleasing. APPENDIX IV.— (See p. 459.) As a specimen of the correct manner in which the French writers treat our literary history, I here give an anecdote from a work bearing a high character in France, viz. Bar- bier, Bibliotheque d'un Homme de Goat, vol. i. p. 425. " Gray. — Gray, dit M. Hennet, dans sa Poe'tique Anglaise, se trouvant un jour a une vente des livres, regardait une belle collection des meilleurs auteurs Francois, tres bien reliee, et du prix de cent guinees. II temoignait a un de ses amis le regret d'etre hors d'etat de l'acheter ; la Duchesse de Northumberland, qui l'entendit, s'iirforma adroitement de cet ami, qu'il etoit. Us se retirerent avant elle, et Gray trouva, en rentrant chez lui, la collection, avec un billet de la duchesse, qui le pria de l'excuser, si elle lui offrait un aussi foible gage de sa reconnoissance, pour le plaisir quelle avoit eprouve a la lecture de l'Elegie sur un Cimetiere de Cam- pagne." It is useless to conjecture on what foundation this extraordinary romance could have been built. The same writer says, that, after translating Virgil, Dryden commenced his dramatic career, and that Gay died of grief from the Lord Chamberlain forbidding the representation of the Beggar's Opera; that Cowley was employed in political negotiations by Charles the First and Second; and that Young died of grief from the loss of a virtuous wife and two young children. APPENDIX. 483 He mentions with praise a translation of Paradise Lost by Mons. St. Maur, but says, " Le traductenr n'a pas toujours suivi literalement son original. Tantot il en a adouci quelques traits, tantot il en a retranche d'autres. II en a supprime^ quelques uns ; par example, dans le livre neuvieme,ow lapudeur riest point assez me'nagee, lorsque le poete fait la peinture des plaisirs que les premieres atteintes de la concupiscence font chercher a Adam et Eve apres leur chute. Mais il en reste assez dans la traduction pour fair sentir que Milton, quoique Chretien, n'avoit pas sur cet article la memo deli- catesse que montre Virgile dans la quatrieme livre de son Enei'de. M. de St. Maur a aussi dpargn6 au lecteur la plupart des details, dans lequels le poete entre sur le chemin que le superilu des alimens prenoit dans les esprits celestes, comment il se dissipait pa?' la transpiration ; et il y a d'autres imagi- nations encore plus extravagantes dans le poeme Anglais dont quelques unes n'ont point, avec raison, &£ traduites par l'ecri- vain Francois," &c. 2 K ADVERTISEMENT. Having obtained through a friend, by a partial collation of the Manuscript Copy of Gray's Correspondence, a correction of some errors made by the transcriber, I have taken the opportunity of adding some further illustrations of the text, which may interest the reader by making him more fully acquainted with the persons alluded to, and may also serve as materials for any future editor, from which he may select what he considers to be necessary to the explanation of the subjects. A small volume is also now preparing, which will contain some early and unpublished Letters of West and other friends, and form a valuable addition to the whole. The greater part of Gray's Correspondence being thus published from the authentic and original Manuscripts, will, it is to be hoped, for the future occupy the place of that so imperfectly and unfaithfully given by Mason ; for, at present, it is only by consulting different publications, that the whole of the original Letters of the Poet can be obtained. J. M. Benhall, March 1855. ADDITIONAL NOTES. Preface, p. v. The library connected with the manuscripts of Gray, was bequeathed to Mr. Bright by his relation Mr. Ston- hewer, and remained in the possession of the family till the year 1845, when it was brought to sale in London: therefore there is a passage in the Memoirs of Mr. Cradock which I do not under- stand. He writes, " I received a kind message from the Kev. Mr. Bright, of Skeffington Hall, Leicestershire, to inform me that he had wished to deposit with me all the remaining papers and documents of Mr. Gray, as bequeathed to him by Mr. Stonhewer, but that he found they had all been carried to Rome inadvertently by a learned editor." Vol. i. p. 184. — The learned editor was the late Mr. Mathias, and the manu- scripts which he printed were from the Library at Pembroke College, Cambridge, where they still remain. Page xiii. (Dr. Hurd.) On the authority of Mr. Cradock, this report is to be rejected; for he says, " It was about this period that Mason's Life of Gray was advertised, and he de- sired me to read it as soon as it appeared, and give him the particulars of the contents. I then perceived that there was an interregnum in the friendship between him and Mason, for as soon as I looked over the book I was fully convinced that he had never been consulted about the publication. The cen- sures on the University of Cambridge would by no means have suited, and I informed him that I was quite astonished at some of the affected vulgarisms in the Letters of Gray. — 1 You are not aware, then,' said he, ' of Mr. Gray's peculiar humour ? ' — ' I am aware, Sir, that Mr. Gray was a keen satirist, for I possess some of his epigrams, and some epitaphs 2 k2 ISf) ADDITIONAL NOTES. that may as properly be termed epigrams; but I could not believe that Mr. Gray would have written such passages as ' Here squats me I.' ' Pray take care of not catching an ague.' — 'I have no reply to make to you on the subject,' said he; ' the Letters were never selected by me.' " — Mr. Cradock how- ever was unacquainted with the numerous alterations by Mason in the genuine text of Gray, which were first made known to me when I became possessed of the Wharton Cor- respondence, and which I mentioned in the Preface to the Edi- tion of 180G, where the Letters were published in their original form : but so different was the feeling of the public mind from that which has prevailed since Boswell's Life of Johnson led the way, in disclosing the minute occurrences and narrating the casual conversations of domestic life in the confidential hours of private or social intercourse, that when the Memoirs of Gray appeared, Mason was blamed for his too liberal com- munication of the correspondence. "I have endeavoured," said a clever writer, " at an awful distance to follow the style and manner of our best authorities, particularly the celebrated Mr. Mason. In one particular, however, I must beg leave to differ from him, and many other great authorities : I cannot persuade myself, that it is a fair and honourable part to publish private correspondence, never intended for publica- tion," &c. See Musical Travels, by Joel Collier, p. viii.* Page xiv. The title which Lord Shelburne enjoyed of Malagrida, was given in an anonymous production by * These Travels were written by Mr. Bicknell, under an assumed name, in ridicule of Dr. Burney. But as regards Dr. Strahan's publication of Dr. Johnson's prayers and the private memoranda of his religious feelings, with the disclosure of the secret and conscientious struggles and disquietudes that perpetually harassed that great and good man's mind with painful regrets, and broken resolutions, — this was surely too sacred a deposit to have been laid open to the public gaze, and the making it public has always appeared to me to be quite unjustifiable. ADDITIONAL NOTES. 487 the Author of Junius. See Woodfall's Edition, vol. ii. pp. 472, 484, and Lord Mahon's History, vol. iv. p. 269. Page xviii. " With Walpole." Warburton, in a letter to Garrick, dated Feb. 17, 17G2, writes, in allusion to Walpole's remarks on Gothic Edifices in his Anecdotes of Painting, " for which I shall be about his pots, as Bentley said to Lord Halifax of Rowe; but I say it better, I mean the gallipots and washes of his toilet. I know he has a fribble tutor at his elbow, as sicklied over with affectation as himself; but these half men are half wits; of whom Dryden says, — " They are so little, and so light, One should not know they lived, but that they bite." Garrick Corr. i. p. 139. Page xviii. note. See Memoirs of Rev. F. Gary, by his Son, vol. i. p. 233. " We were inqvuring of an old servant which were Gray's rooms. He shewed them to us, and then led us into the hall, out of which he helped to carry Gray when he was suddenly seized with the fit that terminated his life '' Page xx. The object of Gray was to express the descriptions and scientific definitions of the Swedish naturalist in more clas- sical Latinity. But see some judicious and correct criticisms on the alterations which he made, in the Quarterly Review, No. xxii. p. 207, by Dr. Whitaker. Lord Monboddo has some observations on the style of Linngeus in the " Origin of Language," vol. iii. p. xviii. Page xxiii. (Lyric harmony.) The Monthly Reviewer, 1763, when noticing the Gratulatio Acad. Cantabrigiensis, p. 44, says, " We cannot approve of Mr. Tyson's Ode, on account of the short rhymes and artificial plumage (both the peculiar foibles of the modern Cambridge Poetry)." — This is an allu- sion to the style of Gray and Mason. 488 ADDITIONAL NOTES. Page xxiii. (Gray's language.) " The tessellated mind of Gray, especially made up of Italian reading; but there is too little vitality in his elegant appropriations to be communica- tive of life to that surrounding literature, which he had sense enough in some things to despise, but not strength enough to amend." See Remains of Arthur Hallam, p. 139. Page xxiv. " Gray, in the safe privacy of a college life, pondered over the profoundest subjects with an undisturbed force of meditation, repeated year after year, till the very intensity hazarded a mistake of the native character of what he contemplated. But he had no temptations to error from the delusive mists of passion or interest. The world had neither promotions nor distinctions to offer He had in his own possession the means of independence. He sought not the notice of rank ; he had something which approached to contempt of popular fame. His main satisfaction, exclusive of the pleasure of the immediate employment, probably arose from the proof he afforded to himself of his own skill."— Sir Egerton Brydges's Anti-Critic, p. 109. Pao-e xxvi. Though Mason's poetical style was enriched with as much ornament as it could well receive, yet we find Mr. Gilpin, in his preface to the Tour in Scotland, p. v. saying, " In the work I have just alluded to (?'. e. Tour to the Lakes) many thought my language too luxuriant, particularly a friend of your lordship's, whose practice in versification makes his taste the more easily offended, when prose, deviating into poetical phrase, trangresses its proper bounds." Yet Gilpin's poetical style, of which we possess one pleasing specimen in his poem called "Landscape Painting," is in my opinion superior to Mason's, being less loaded Avith decorations; and, with a few correcting touches, would form a good specimen of ADDITIONAL NOTES. 489 the language and manner suitable to didactic poetry. It has however been overlooked in the superior attractions of his elegant and instructive compositions in prose. Page xxxii. (Latin Poems.) Gray is said by Mason to have preferred at one part of his life his Latin poems to those which in his own language gained him such high and lasting reputation, " When I first knew him he set a greater value on his Latin poetry than on that which he had com- posed in his native language." — As Mason has confined this preference which was given by the Poet to an early period of his life, it may be concluded that Gray subsequently became acquainted with certain defects in the metrical formation of his odes, which could scarcely have been suspected in one so criti- cally exact in other particulars. Some of these have been pointed out by me in the Aldine edition of his poems ; and subse- quently Dr. Tate, in his Dissertation on the Metres of Horace, p. 201, observes — " Gray, the Etonian, though exquisite in the observance of the nicest beauties in the hexameters of Virgil, shews himself strangely unacquainted with the rules of Horace's lyric verse," &c. Page 1. (James.) Bead " Richard " West. Page 1. (Coach and six.) It was the opinion of Sir James Mackintosh that the style and manner of expression in the Letters of Gray were formed on those of Madame de Sevigne. That Gray had read her attractive, and elegant Correspondence with attention cannot be doubted, and whatever influence it had upon his own, must be judged, not by the adoption of par- ticular expressions, but by the general impression left on the reader's mind of their habits of viewing the subjects pre- sented. " II y a un infinite de tours d'expression (says an accomplished female writer on this subject) qui dependent en- 490 ADDITIONAL NOTES, tierement du genre de la langue Fran9oise, et feroit une fort mauvaise figure dans la notre." A few particular expressions I find noted in the margin of my copy ; ex. gr. referring to the pre- sent passage — " J'etais avant hier au soir dans cette avenue — je vis venir une carrosse a six chevaux." Again, " Both vale and hill are covered with most venerable beech trees, that, like most other ancient people, are always droning out their old stories to the woods," &c. — M. de S., " Toutes ses Dryades afihgees que je vus hier, tous ces vieux sylvains, qui ne savent plus ou se retirer . . . et qui sait, si plusieurs de ces vieux chenes n'ont point parle?" &c. Again, " I take it ill that you should say anything against the Mole ; it is a reflection, I see, cast on the Thames. Do you think that rivers which have lived in London and its neighbourhood all their days, will run roaring and tumbling about, like your transmontane torrents in the North ? No, they only glide and whisper." — M. de Sevigne, " Nous passons tous les ponts, avec un plaisir qui nous les fait souhaiter; il n'y pas beaucoup d'ex-voto pour les nau- frages de la Loire, non plus que pour la Durance. II y auroit plus de raison de craindre cette derniere, qui est folle, que notre Loire, qui est sage et majestueuse." Again, " Morley is going to be married to a grand, staid maiden of thirty years old, with much pelf, — and his own relative. Poor soul ! " — M. de S. " C'est sur le grand Bossuet lui-meme, quand on lui donna l'abbaye de Rebais, quelle soupire, et dit — Le pauvre homme!" — Gray, in a letter to Walpole, 1747, alludes to an expression of M. de Sevigne, — " Bien que je n'en tiens pas boutique." — In an early letter to West, in 1739, " Mont Cenis, I confess, carries the permission mountains have of being fright- ful rather too far." This is an allusion to a well-known bon mot on Pelisson by M. de S., " Qu'il s'abusoit de la per- mission qu'ont les hommes d'etre laids." — In Gray's Tour, p. 10, the expression " cannot see the streets for houses," is illustrated by some examples in the note, to which may be ADDITIONAL NOTES. 491 added from M. de Sevigne. — " Prenez garde dc voirvos affairef domestiques de trop pros, et que, les maisons ne vous empechent de voir la cille." Page 13. This Letter (No. III.) was written to Mr. Brown and not to Mason, as appears by the address in the MS., and must therefore be corrected in a future edition. Page 15. A slight mistake occurs in the note. Mr. Ston- hewer was originally of Trinity College, where he took his degree, and was afterwards elected Fellow of St. Peter's College. A very pleasing portrait of him, by Sir J. Reynolds, is in Grafton House, Piccadilly. In the Gent. Mag., Feb. 1809, p. 188, is the following entry:— " Jan. 30, 1809, died, aged 81, Richard Stonhewer, Esq., Auditor of the Excise." Page 17. Mr. Avison was author of an expression, on seeing, for the first time, Keswick Lake, winch is well known and has been often repeated. " Here is beauty indeed, beauty lying in the lap of horror." — " We do not often," says Mr. Gilpin, who records it, " find a happier expression." Page 19. For " brightness," read " brightest." Page 20. In the note, for March, " 1718," read " 1758." Page 20. The Rev. John Dixon, of Boughton, Northamp- tonshire, and Dr. Burgh, of York, collected the works of Mason for publication, to which it was intended to prefix a Life by the latter ; to whom Mason bequeathed his miniature portrait of Milton by S. Cooper, as an acknowledg- ment of his wish ; but the four volumes appeared in 1811, fifteen years after Mason's death, without a Life or name of an Editor: though I found in a MS. paper, that after Dr. Burgh's death, Mr. Dixon had been preparing materials for that purpose. This paper was inserted in the MS. Corres- 492 ADDITIONAL NOTES. pondence of Mason, that had been in Mr. Dixon's temporary- possession, and that was lent to him for the purpose of collecting materials from it. Page 23. In the first line, for " know," read " knew;" and for " I should," in the postscript, read " and should." Page 24. (His mother.) It is mentioned by Mason, as a mark of the tender affection which Gray bore to his mother's memory, that the trunk containing her clothes remained unopened by him at his death. It is pleasing to read a similar instance of filial affection in another person of great eminence in that day. When Warburton was promoted to the See of Gloucester, he said, — " It has come too late; if my mother had been living it might have given me some satisfac- tion." See Hurd's Life of Warburton, p. 106. He used, says his biographer and friend, to call her his " incomparable mother, whom I more than love, I adore." Page 25, line 8. For " we do," read " one do." Page 27. For "fortnight, read "fourth night;" and for " news," read " lueurs." Page 27. William Fraser, Esq., Under-Secretary of State. This gentleman is mentioned in Gilpin's Tour to the Wye as a " friend of Gray," see p. iv. Page 30, line 3. For " fully," read " full." Page 32. For " e'er yet," read " ere yet." For March " 1762," read " 1782 ;" and for administration " 1760," read » " 1765," being the date of the first Rockingham Administra- tion. Page 33. (Piano.) Millar, the organist of York, said " that Mason performed decently on the harpsichord, but it ADDITIONAL NOTES. 493 was not possible to teach him the principles of composition. That he and others had all tried in vain to instruct him." See Southey's Doctor, ii. p. 205; and for a further account of Mason by the same person, see ditto, iv. ch. cxxvi. pp. 258-277. To what extent Mason's scientific knowledge of music reached I do not know, but in the Life of the first Dr. Burney, the musical composer, it is said by his biographer, " He also now renewed, into long and social meetings at his own apart- ments at Chelsea College, an acquaintance of twenty-six years' standing with Mason the poet, by whom he was often con- sulted upon schemes of Church Psalmody, with respect both to its composition and execution, as well as upon other desirable improvements in our sacred harmony, which he, Mason, from practical knowledge both of music and poetry, was peculiarly fitted to inculcate and refine." iii. p. 191. We learn, on the same authority, that Mason was so charmed with Pacchierotti, that on that great singer's arrival in England, Mason volunteered his services to teach him the English language. Page 35, last line. For " hair," read " air.' Page 37. (Pray give, &c.) This belongs to the next Letter, and should be placed as a postscript. Page 40. For " Plumtree," read " Plumptre." Page 42. (Lord II .) So in the MS. Page 42. On G. Hamilton's speech, see Macaulay's Life of Chatham, p. 35. Trav. Library. Page 46, note. Dele "Fifth Senior," and insert "Seventh" Wrangler. 494 ADDITIONAL NOTES. Page 48. For July " 25th," read " 230." Page 49. (Black as the moral of Voltaire's Lisbon.) It is somewhat startling to find Dr. S. Parr, when mentioning many " wise and good men" who have pleaded for lenient and equitable expedients in punishment, class Voltaire as one, together with Sir T. More and Dr. S. Johnson! See Philo- patr. Varvicensis, p. 323. Page 51, note. Bead "that the genial influences;" for " fancies," read " fantasies;" for " I can only add," read " I can only, &c." Page 52. In a letter from Gray to Mr. Wharton, 1752, he mentions his having read Madame de Maintenon's Letters, and gives his opinion of them. See also Horace Walpole's Correspondence, vol. i. p. 502 : " Two or three letters have made me a little jealous for my adored Madame de Sevigne." The celebrated letter which is said to have made her fortune, written for Madame de Montespan, is No. xlii. Page 54, line 12. Read " also, and; " line 16, read " found impracticable for Mr. Brown, at least pray make it sure for yourself, which is to be wished in the next place." Page 55, line 3. For " or," read " nor." Page 55. (Second note.) Read "Spencer" late Fellow of Pembroke College, went to Trinity Hall and took his degree, 1750. He was originally of Trinity, and afterwards was elected Fellow of Pembroke. Page 59. Read "7s. 3±d," "4s. 9|d;" page 60, dele "8fZ." after "eggs;" "Duke and Duchess," dele "and;" in page 61, line 1, " venison." ADDITIONAL NOTES. 495 Page 61. For " Phrygian fire," read " fane." Page 61. (Caractacus.) "You may read Mason's Carac- tacus. It is a drama not dramatical. His Melpomene is too cliaste and too cold for the theatre. She is a very modest virgin, pure in sentiment and devotion and void of passion. Her sober ornaments are a Greek veil and some Draidical hieroglyphics, all which 1 mightily respect, and do not at all like." See Mrs. Montagu's Letters, vol. iv., p. 191. Page 63, line 4. Read " Is not her" is false English; for "ii. 2," read" 11, 1, and 2." Page 64. See Gray's Letter to Dr. Wharton, Dec. 20, 1758. " What you say of Dr. Akenside I fully agree with you in, and have mentioned it to Mason ; as soon as 1 can write to Mr. Ilurd I shall report to him a part of your words, which I think will prevail ; besides I know he thinks himself obliged to you in Dr. Heberden's affairs." — In a letter in 1746 to the same, Akenside is spoken of as " your young friend." See Gray's Works, ed. Aid. vol. iii. p. 190. Page 67. Read " Brother, I spurn it 1" — better than, "I scorn it!" Page 68. " More hearty," read " more hasty." Page 69. (Aske.) See the Ballad of young Tamlane," in Scott's Minstrelsy, vol. ii. p. 254 : — "They'll turn me in your arms, Janet, An adder and an aske. They'll turn me in your arms, Janet, A bale that burns fast." See also Jamieson's Dictionary, v. " Aske, an eft, a newt." 49G ADDITIONAL NOTES. Page 69. For " something,"' read " somewhat." Page 71, 1. 3. For " allegorical," reacZ " allegoric." Page 74. jRead "I had no objection before but to — harm.' 1 '' Page 75. Sir Egerton Brydges, in enumerating the names of poets whom, he says, Mr. Campbell has overlooked in his Specimens with not a little injustice, has mentioned Dr. Delap. See Anti-Critic, p. 99. Mr. Jones, in his enlarged edition of Baker's Biog. Dramatica, has given a slight notice of him. Page 76. On Dr. Brown's Estimate see Macaulay's Life of Chatham, p. 37 (Trav. Library). On the severity or malignity of the Monthly Review, vol. xviii. p. 354, see Southey's Common-Place Book, vol. iv. p. 342. The cause of the decline of the reputation of this work being as rapid as the rise is given by Cowper. — " Dr. Brown's Estimate," says Dr. Ferriar, " is referred to in a passage (in Sterne's Sermons) so obscurely, that modern readers can hardly recognise it." — See Illustra- tions of Sterne, p. 28. Dr. Brown was the first person who directed public attention to the beauties of the Lakes of the north of England, as shewn in his Letter to Lord Lyttelton. Page 76. Read " and a power of learning." Page 79. " Mr. Franklyn " in the MS. Thomas, son of Richard Franklin, printer of the Craftsman ; he was educated at Westminster and at Trinity College; in 1750 elected to the Greek Professorship; in 1759 his translation of Sophocles appeared; in 1780 he published a translation of Lucian, 2 vols. 4to. He died in Great Queen Street, March 15, 1784. For his other works see Biog. Dictionary. ADDITIONAL NOTES. 497 Page 82, note. This criticism by Dr. Hard on the Chinese Drama was inserted by Dr. Percy in his Chinese Miscellanies, vol. i. p. 82, 1762. See his xldvertisernent prefixed, p. 217. Page 84. " Fierce war," &c, these lines obliterated in the MS. Page 85, line 12. " That poetry," dele " that." Page 8G, last line. L. " Yet I have." Page 87. " I don't think indeed I defy you." Page 88. " I have wrote " — " and a man," — " can't " for " cannot." Page 100. See mention of Mr. (Palmyra) Wood and his circumstances, in Ralph's (Dunciad Ralph) Case of Authors, p. 132. The portrait alluded to in the note was taken during his stay at Rome. He was appointed Under-Secretary of State on his return, and died 1771. Page 108. (My nibblings.) The reader of these criticisms will not forget a passage that occurs in one of Gray's Letters : " Even a bad verse is as good a thing, or better, than the best observation that ever was made on it." Which, if properly interpreted, may be accepted as true; and a well-known passage of La Bruyere puts in its proper point of view, the sub- ordinate rank which criticism must be content to occupy in the train of successful genius : " Quand une lecture vous eleve l'esprit,et qu'ellevous inspire des sentimens nobles, ne cherchez pas une autre regie pour juger de l'ouvrage — il est bon, et fait de la main de l'ouvrier. Le critique apres 9a peut s'exercer sur les petites choses," &c. Page 109. (Northamptonshire.) Read " Nottinghamshire." Two miles from Newstead Abbey. 498 ADDITIONAL NOTES. Page 109. Mr. Frederick Montagu sat for Northampton, and afterwards for Higham Ferrers : lie was a member of the Rockingham party, and one of the seven commissioners named in Mr. Fox's India Bill. Page 115. (Sir M. Lamb.) He was executor to Lord Fitzwilliam, and in that capacity had leases granted to him, by the Master and Fellows of Pembroke College, of this estate of Orton Waterville, near Peterborough, and of the tithes of Tilney, in Norfolk, in the years 1763-66. The dispute with the college treasurer probably might arise in settling the fine in one of the renewals. Page 116. (Letter XXVIII.) This Letter probably refers to some personal satire uttered by Mason against some great personage, either the king or the minister. The conversation would be probably with Lord Holdernesse, and his resignation of the chaplaincy to the king the event alluded to. Mason was then on a visit to Lord H., as appears from the Letter following this. Mason's temper was petulant, and impatient of any submission to superiors. " He quitted a promising situation at court with ostentatious contempt, and he treated the person of his sovereign with unpardonable insolence and injustice. His Tory Metropolitan ( Archb. Markham) fared no better. In this contempt of superiors and hatred of subordi- nation he resembled Milton. It was constitutional in him, and he allowed it to become inveterate," &c. {Dr. Whitaker, " the author of the exact, elaborate, and beautiful History of Whalley." See Corresp. of R. Thoresby, vol. i. p. 353, n.) See Quarterly Rev. No. xxx. p. 378. Page 119. Mr. Gilpin says, "that the seat of Orgar Earl of Devonshire is supposed to be Warrington Park, near Launceston, Cornwall .... His beautiful daughter, Elfrida, is the subject of one of the most affecting stories in English history, and one of the purest dramatic compositions in the English language." See Tour in the West of England, p. 191. ADDITIONAL NOTES. 199 Page 121. (Sir C. Hanbury.) Sir C. II. Williams, whose poems were collected and published in three volumes by Mr. Jeffrey the bookseller in 1822, and dedicated to Lord John Russell ! See also Memoirs of Horace Walpole, vol. i. pp. 311-313. Page 121. The character of the Duke of Newcastle is ably drawn by Mr. Macaulay, in his Life of Lord Chatham, pp. 32-59 ; and in the review of Walpole's Correspondence, p. 43, Trav. Library. See also Coxe's Memoirs of Sir R. Walpole, p. 108. Geoi'ge the Second said, " You see 1 am compelled to take the Duke of Newcastle to be my minister, who is not fit to be chamberlain in the smallest court in Germany." From his situation and rank many books of high character were dedicated to him. Clarke's Connection of Roman and Saxon Coins, 1767, 4to., a very learned work, was inscribed in a dedication highly laudatory of the Duke's public conduct and private character; and so was the younger Bentley's Manilius, and the Latin Odes of Ant. Alsop by Sir Francis Bernard. See also Mrs. Carter's Letters, ii. p. 13. But there was an habitual oddity and frivolity of manner which excited much ridicule. See Sir C. Williams's Poems, vol. i. p. 1, for the fable, " A Lion who o'er all the Plain." Mr. Cradock says, " It was unaccountable to me, much as he had been ridiculed by Foote on the stage, that he could not restrain himself, even in the street, from seizing your head and holding it between his hands, while perhaps he would ask the most unmeaning and trifling questions." See Memoirs, iv. p. 118. In Sir James Porter's Journals and Correspondence in Constantinople is given a similar account of the Duke's behaviour at an interview — of his receiving him with embraces, stroking his face, setting his wig, stooping towards your ear, " Has he a borough? Can he pet into Parliament," &c. Smollct' 2 L 500 ADDITIONAL NOTES. well-known sketch of the Duke, after this, it has been said, caii hardly be called a caricature. P. 122. (Mason's Installation Ode.) The Monthly Review, No. III., (first Monthly Register or Catalogue,) notices this Ode : " Our panegyric odes have so near a sameness in them all, that we imagine our readers will excuse our quoting no passages from this, which is however looked upon as a very ingenious performance by the admirers of this species of poetry." Page 122. " John Dixon, mentioned at page 437, was my father's brother, and a very intimate friend of Mason and Palgrave, who left him his library. The statement that he (Mason) Avas indifferent as to his blabbing some literary secret to the Czarina, is explained by his being at that time chaplain to the British merchants at Petersburgh." The above is an extract from a letter received by me from the Rev. W. H. Dixon, M.A. F.S.A. Canon of York, and Domestic Chaplain to the Archbishop of York, Mason's near relative. I received this letter 10 Dec. 1853, and Mr. Dixon died Feb. 17, 1854, in his 70th year, a few weeks after I had received a second, relating to the Correspondence. — A biogra- phical sketch of him appeared in the Gentleman's Magazine, N.S. vol. xlii. p. 428. Page 127. Add to the note on Mallet's Northern Anti- quities, " Benj. Constant, de la Religion, torn. i. p. 361, edit. Bruxelles." Page 142. (Akenside.) See postscript to the Dedication to the Freethinkers, in the edition of 1766, in Warburton's Works, vol. i. p. 181, where the allusion to Akenside is to be found. See Mrs. Carter's Letter to Miss Talbot, Corr. vol. i. p. 79. ADDITIONAL NOTES. 501 Page 147. There is a curious anecdote of Garrirk nol being able to pronounce the periods of Milton, and avoiding acting in any play written in that learned and stately style, in Monboddo's Orig. of Language, iv. p. 241. Tage 147. Read " Francklin." Page 151. (Balguy.) Bishop Ilallifax dedicated his edition of Butler's Analogy to Dr. Balguy. The allusion to " Dr. Balgwjs losing one night's rest," is explained by the circum- stance that the messenger who carried the news, galloped into the college or residence at Winchester in the middle of the night and roused every body up. Though the word " uncle " is applied to Balguy, there was no relationship between Mason and him ; he was perhaps called so jocosely as having been Mason's tutor. There is a fine character of Dr. Balguy given by one generally very sparing of his praise, I mean by Bishop Hurd in his Life of Warburton, p. 114, ed. 8vo. " Dr. Bal- guy was a person of extraordinary parts and extraordinary learning, indeed of universal knowledge, and, what is so precious in a man of letters, of the most exact judgment, as appears by some valuable discourses, which, having been written occasionally on important subjects and published sepa- rately by him, had raised his reputation so high, that his Majesty, out of his singular love of merit, was pleased, in 1761, to make him the offer of the bishoprick of Gloucester." In my younger days, which were passed in the diocese of Winchester, Dr. Balguy was personally remembered by some of the elder clergy, and his name was held in the highest honour in that city in which he possessed his preferment, and indeed everywhere when he was mentioned. The copy of his sermons which I possess, was presented to me by one who had known him, and could correctly estimate his great merits and 2 l 2 502 ADDITIONAL NOTES. accomplishments, having himself been offered the Under- Mastership of Winchester College. Page 154. " The author who comes nearest to Milton in blank verse is Doctor Armstrong. Of this admirable poem the diction is more splendid than even of Milton's Paradise Lost; but the versification has not so much the merit of giving the verse the beauties of prose composition." See Monboddo's Origin of Language, vol. iii. pp. 166, 364; v. p. '467. On Armstrong's poem of " Day," 1761, see Churchill's Poems, ed. Aid. iii. p. 308. It was an Epistle to Wilkes from Germany by him, that offended Churchill. Page 155. (Duchess of Queensberry.) " Lady Bolingbroke, who was one of the politest women in the world, gratified the Duchess of Queensberry with the title of ' La Singularite.' Her Grace was in raptures with the appellation. She had talked, she had eat, she had dressed, she had lived for no other purpose but to be called ' La Singularite." See Mrs. Montagu's Letters, vol. iv. p. 50. Page 157. For " Browne," read " Brown." Page 167. (Incontinently drown yourself.) These are the words of Roderigo. See Othello, Act i. Scene 3. Page 169. (I did not go.) Gray's taste for the drama extended from the opera to the farce. Mr. Cradock mentions that Foote was not inattentive to men of genius, " for, when Mason and Gray made some inquiries about places at his theatre in the Haymarket, he immediately sent a polite note to them, and, though the house was quite crowded, I saw that they were well accommodated with a front row in a side-box. They duly estimated his attention, and mentioned it as it ADDITIONAL NOTES. 503 deserved, on their return to Cambridge." See CradockV Memoirs, i. p. 31. Page 171. (King of Portugal.) See Walpole's Misc Letters, vol. v. p. 517 ; and also Mrs. Montagu's Letters, vol.iv. p. 213: " The great affair at Lisbon is not entirely under- stood, and some say it is made of the dire ingredients of criminal love, ambition of regal power, and popular discon- tent. These, stirred up by Jesuit art, provoked assassination." See Ranke's Lives of the Popes, vol. iii. p. 208, note; and a more detailed account, in the Memoirs of the Margravine of Anspach, vol. i. p. 385-388. In 1833, Miss Pardoe mentions in her Traditions of Portugal having conversed with the Lady Abbess of a female convent of La Trappe at Sacavem, who de- scribed herself as " the daughter of the Marquis of Tavora, executed for the conspiracy against King Joseph" — Dom Jose I See the particulars in vol. ii. p. 330. She was con- veyed as an infant to this convent, where she had worn away eighty years of a miserable existence. P. 174. Mrs. Cockburn drew up a Compendium of Dr. Rutherford's Essay on Virtue, and sent the MS. to Bishop Warburton, who was extremely pleased with it, and wrote a short preface in recommendation of the work. See Hurd's Life of Warburton, p. 35. Page 177. (Hurd, see note.) " I spent," says Mr. Graves, " an agreeable afternoon with Dr. Warburton, Dr. Hurd, and Mr. Mason. The two former seemed to have a great regard for Mr. Mason; but, with great good humour, rallied him by allusion to some eccentricities to which poets are so fre- quently subject."— See Graves's Triflers, p. 77. As Bishop Hurd is mentioned in the note, I may add that the brief in- 504 ADDITIONAL NOTES. scription at Prior Park, to the memory of Mr. Allen, is written by him: — " Memorise optimi viri Radulphi Allen Positum — qui virtutem veram Simplicemque colis, venerare hoc saxum." Speaking of the introduction of Warburton to Mr. Allen, of Bath, by Mr. Pope, the particulars of which he gives, Mr. Graves adds, " The same may be applied to the present re- spectable and no less learned and ingenious Dr. Hurd, Bishop of "Worcester; whom, from a very retired situation, Dr. War- burton drew into celebrity, by introducing him to Prior Park." — p. G9. The volume of Correspondence between Hurd and Mason, which had been carefully preserved by the latter, was returned by his executors to the Bishop, probably at his desire; the letters of Mason's other friends remained in the closets at Aston till the death of Mr. Alderson. A cool- ness which at one time took place, and produced a short interruption of their friendship, may have made the restora- tion of this correspondence advisable. This was known to the Rev. Mr. Polwhele, and mentioned by him in his Tradi- tions, and also in a poem which he published anonymously : — " I feel the rising sigh, When Hurd, who once could flatter, now looks shy." Page 180. (Lady Holdemesse.) " This amiable and sen- sible and sweet-tempered lady was a kind and warm friend to Mrs. Carter, from the time of their first acquaintance to the day of her death." Mr. Pennington says, " He remembers with particular delight the days which he had the honour of passing in her society, when after Lord Holdernesse's death she spent the summer at Deal Castle. Her conversation was full of anecdote and knowledge of life, and her manners so agreeable, that it was always a treat to be in her company." — Mrs. Carter's ADDITIONAL NOTES. 505 Letters to Mrs. Montagu, vol. i. p. 385, and to Miss Talbot, vol. iii. p. 143, 1766, when the friendship briran. Lady Mol- dernesse possessed by purchase or inheritance many exquisite pictures of the Dutch school, which were sold by auction in 1802. The name of Iloldernesse House, in Park Lane, still marks the original possessor. Page 185. (Lady Essex.) The mention of Lady Essex, and also of her early death, often occurs in the Correspondence of Mrs. Montagu, as vol. iv. p. 15 : "I should have wrote to you about Lady Essex. I assure you she is pleine de vie, and will make one of the best ornaments of Lady Townshend's to-night. I think she has at present a strict friendshij) with my quondam friend the Lady Vanity — who pushes her about to plays, operas, &c. every night: but Innocence is always of the party." — P. 19. "I am glad I mentioned Lady Essex in my former letter, as I find people have said things to her disadvantage. She coquets extremely with her own husband, which is very lawful, and she has a general air of vivacity, which to those who are he'rissees with prudery may displease, but she is an extremely fine girl. She wants to have the bon ton, and you know that the bon ton of 1786 is un peu equivoque.''' — P. 196. After Lady Essex's death, she writes, " The sense of Lady Frances AVilliams's affliction sat heavy on my mind. The news of it was brought to me just as I Avas setting out, and it spoiled my part of the general joy, diffused so bountifully through the whole creation, on a fine summer's day. A fever, added to the maladies of lying-in, hurried off Lady Essex in three days. The fondness of a mother and the opinions of a Christian are all shocked at the rapidity of the accident which hurried this gay young creature out of the world, in all the jollity of her Mayday moi-ning. In vain had education en- deavoured to give her a solidity of character; she was carried 30(5 ADDITIONAL NOTES. away by the force of fashion down the stream of pleasure fast and far; and, as her faults are those that arise from levity, not weakness, one had hopes that she would, after a time, grow more prudent, and dislike those follies she had caught of the infection of the world " — See p. 219. " I had not seen Lady Frances Williams since the death of Lady Essex, so the meeting was painful ; but she bore up better than I expected, and I have the comfort of finding her less dejected than I feared." Page 190. On Lord G. Sackville, see a remarkable note in Grenville Correspondence, iv. p. 173. Page 192, note. For " succeeded Lord Bute in 1701," read "was succeeded by Lord Bute, 1761." He was dis- missed very abruptly, as appears from Walpole, and from Lord Mahon's History. " Lord Holdernesse being removed with very little ceremony indeed, but with a pension, to make room for him (Lord Bute)." — See original letter in Notes and Queries, Dec. 1, 1849 (dated Sept, 22, 1761.) " Lord Hol- dernesse," says Mr. Macaulay, " one of the Secretaries of State, in pursuance of a plan concerted with the court, resigned the seals." — Life of Chatham, p. 73. (Trav. Library.) Page 199. CENOTAPH FOR The Chukch of Monks' Horton, in Kent. This Tablet is inscribed as' a memorial of 'Hie Rev. William Kobinson, A.M. Rector of Burfield in Berkshire, ;md formerly also Rector of Denton, in the county of Kent, Who died in Dec. 1803, aged (circ.) 76. ADDITIONAL NOTES. 507 He was one of the younger Sons of Matthew Robinson, of this Parish of Horton, Esq. by Elizabeth, Heiress of the family of Morris; Whose mother re-married the learned Conyers Middleton, DA). And the said Matthew was Grandson of Sir Leonard Robinson, Kt. one of the sons of Thomas Robinson, of Rokeby, in the county of York, Esq. by his marriage (in 1621) with Frances, daughter of Leonard Smelt, of Kirby-Fletham, Esq. by ... . Allanson. The said William Robinson was a good and ripe scholar, a man of highly cultivated taste, and superior native talent. He was the friend and companion of men of genius, and especially intimate with the poet Gray. He had two sisters distinguished for literature, of whom Elizabeth, widow of Edward Montagu, Esq. is celebrated for her Essay on Shakspere and her Epistolary genius. In Nov. 1800, by the death of his Elder brother, Matthew second Lord Rokeby, he succeeded by demise to a portion of his estates in Kent, Yorkshire, Durham, and Cambridgeshire, and to a large personal property. He left one son and two daughters, his Survivors. See Anti-Critic of Sir Egerton Brydges, Intc. LX. p. 2U1>. 508 ADDITIONAL NOTES. P. 194. Kev. William Robinson, of Denton Court, Can- terbury. The late Sir Egerton Brydges married Mary the youngest daughter of Mr. liobinson, in second nuptials, and resided at Denton. Mr. Pennington, the editor of Mrs. Car- ter's Letters, says, " Mr. Gray was much delighted with the scenery of the grounds and country adjacent to Denton." — Vol. i. p. 384. Page 201. Lord Camelford died 1793. He is described in Collins's Peerage as " a man of some talents, and very elegant acquirements in the arts." — Vol. ix. p. 438. Page 205. (Miss Chudleigh.) " At the subscription mas- querade," Mrs. Montagu writes, " Miss Chudleigh's dress, or rather undress, was remarkable. She was Iphigenia for the sacrifice; but so naked, the high priest might easily inspect the entrails of the victim. The maids of honour (not of maids the strictest) were so offended, that they would not speak to her." See Letters, vol. iii. p. 159; see also Graves's Triflers, p. 51, for an epigram by G. Selwyn. Page 208. The Three Dialogues of the Dead, written by Mrs. Montagu. " The town," she says, " gave them to Charles Yorke." See Letters, vol. iv. p. 259. Page 210. (The old rectory.) " A few miles from Worksop (says Mr. Gilpin), on the borders of Yorkshire, lies Aston, where Mr. Mason, with a generosity rather singular, has built, at his own expense, one of the most comfortable and elegant parsonage houses in England. The old house, whieh is shrouded with trees, is converted into offices, while the new house consists entirely of excellent apartments. In this sweet retreat we spent a day or two," &c. See Tour to Scotland, vol. i. p. 20. Mr. Gilpin has, however, I believe, made a ADDITIONAL NOTES. 509 mistake as to the old rectory being oonverted into offices, as it stood on a different site. Mr. Warner, of Bath, who paid a visit to Mr. Alderson at Aston, has mentioned the chaste elegance of the church, and the choir performing the simple and solemn airs and the psalms versified by Mason. He says, " 1 never before or since have heard church music which so painfully affected me." See Literary Recollections, vol. i. p. 309. Of Mason's classical and elegant library, in which room he chiefly lived, and of the chancel at Aston, where he is buried, I possess two interesting drawings, executed by the pencil, and presented to me by the kindness, of Mrs. Alderson. Page 213. On the death of Lady Hervey and her will, see Grenville Correspondence, iv. p. 357. Page 214. Fur " Dr. Alren," a mistake of the transcriber, read " De Ahfeu." Marquis Don Felix De Abreu was Ambassador Extraordinary from his Catholic Majesty to Eng- land in 1760. See account of him in Biog. Diet. The Dic- tionary of the Italian and English language by Baretti is dedicated to him, in terms of high commendation, and the dedication was written by Dr. Johnson. See Johnson's Works, vol. add. p. 483. Page 217. (Dr. Chapman.) See Gray's letter to Dr. Clarke, Aug. 12, 1760. " Our friend Dr. Chapman (one of its nuisances) is not expected here again in a hurry. He is gone to his grave, with five fine mackerel, large and full of roe, in his belly. He eat them all at one dinner : but his fate was a turbot, on Trinity Sunday, of which he left little for the company besides bones," &c. See Letters, vol. iii. p. 252, ed. Aid. Page 218. (Erse Fragments.) See Mrs. Montagu's Letters, 510 ADDITIONAL NOTES. vol. iv. p. 317. " Lord Marchmont says, our old highland bard is a modern gentleman of his acquaintance. The Bishop of Ossory tells me that Mr. Macpherson receives 100Z. a-year subscription, while he stays in the highlands to translate the poems." See Gray's Letter to Dr. Wharton, vol. iii. p. 264. " For me, I admire nothing but Fingal, yet I remain still in doubt about the authenticity of these poems, though inclining rather to believe them genuine in spite of the world ; whether they were the writings of antiquity or of a modern Scotchman, in either case to me is alike unaccountable. Je rn'y perds." See also Gray's Letter to Mr. Stonhewer, June 29, 1760, giving an account of another Scotch packet, with some speci- mens, " full of nature, and noble, wild, imaginative," &c. See also Monthly Review, No. LIII. p. 102, and Southey's Commonplace-book, vol. iv. p. 344. Some interesting papers were published in the Journal des Scavans, 1765, and subse- quently collected — " Memoires sur les Poesies de M. Macpher- son," in which the object of the writer was to prove, that in these poems the heroes and heroic exploits of Ireland have been transferred to Scotland. See abridgement of it in Monthly Review, 1765, i.p. 558. On the refutation of the antiquity of Macpherson's Ossian by Mr. Laing, as told by Sir Walter Scott to Sir W. Gell, see Lady Blessington's Memoirs, vol. ii. p. 80. Page 218. In the St. James's Magazine, edited by Robert Lloyd, 1762, vol. i. p. 343, is a sneer at Gray and Mason; this proceeded from the same school as Colman's. Gilbert West and Whitehead met the same treatment from the same hands. See vol. iii. p. 149, where either Mason or T. Warton is lampooned. Page 22'J. See character of " Seeker " in Hard's Life of Warburton, p. 69. ADDITIONAL NOTES- 511 Page 232. (Lady Mary Coke.) She had a particular friendship and regard for Mrs. Carter, in whose Life there is an interesting allusion to her, vol. i. pp. 225 and 310. She was also intimate with Lady Holdernesse, p. 400. Page 23G. (The reproof.) " I am sure you will be pleased with what the King said, upon hearing a flattering sermon from Dr. Wilson, one of the Court Chaplains: his Majesty desires the Chaplain may be told that he came to church to hear God praised, not himself." See Mrs. Mon- tagu's Letters, vol. iv. p. 356. Page 237. Mr. Spence, Mr. Doddington, Sir R. Grosvenor, Sir N. Curzon, Sir T. Robinson, Sir William Irby, created peers. Page 237. " Lords Oxford, Litchfield, and Bruce, being supernumerary Lords; and Melrose, Berkeley, Northey, and, I think, George Pitt, supernumerary Grooms of the Bed- chamber." See Mr. Cruch's Letter to Honourable W. Robin- son, Oct. 12, 1761, in Notes and Queries, No. 5, Dec. 1, 1849, p. 07. Page 241. See Bishop Mant's " History of the Irish Church from the Revolution to the Union," for an account of the Honourable Frederic Hervey, pp. 647-688. In 1760 he was Master of Magdalene College, Cambridge; in 1767 Bishop of Cloyne; and in 1768, by the death of Dr. Barnard, Bishop of Derry. His character may be read in Hardy's Life of Lord Charlemont, p. 262, and in Sir Jonah Barrington's Rise and Fall of the Irish Nation. He died at Albano, 8 July, 1803. Pie was a Delegate of the National Convention, corresponded with the Presbytery, and was a patron of the Methodists. A 512 ADDITIONAL NOTES. short and favourable character is given of him by Wesley: see p. 696. The Bishop conformed, in a great degree, to the dress and habits of the dignified clergy of Rome, and was treated with much consideration by the Cardinals: on one occasion he carried with hirn, from a Cardinal at Rome, a letter of introduction to those monasteries at which he might find it convenient to rest. His ecclesiastical superiors, on account of his extravagance of conduct, judged his absence from England less mischievous than his presence. Page 241. " The Heloise cruelly disappointed me; but it has its partisans, among which are Mason and Hurd." — Gray to Dr. Wharton, Letter CI. vol. iii. p. 264. Page 242. For " Marshe " read " Marsk ;" and page 245, for "pile" read "pill." Page 246. (Mrs. Anne Pitt.) There are repeated notices, of the most favourable kind, of this lady in Mrs. Montagu's Letters, — as, " My amiable Miss Pitt and her affection for her brother," vol. iii. p. 261 ; and page 319, " I honour and adore Miss Pitt more every day ; she is very amiable and extremely good." See also pp. 320, 322, 330, and in vol. iv. p. 223, " I hope your Lordship found Mrs. Pitt improved in health. One has nothing else to wish for her. She is formed for society in a peculiar manner. No one puts more wit and brevity and politeness in general conversation, and the depth, activity, and firmness of her understanding make her charming in a tete-a-tete;" and iv. 186, "I could not give you Mrs. Pitt's character in just colours and fair proportions unless I had found that genius, which, Dr. Young says, we are all born with, but must have lost or mislaid: but then, I will assure you, the only fault I have found with her is, that when one is ADDITIONAL NOTES. 513 accustomed to her conversation we know not how to part with it or change it for others. Yon will be afraid of her because she is a court lady. Her manners indeed are of a court, in sentiments still of a higher extraction, and for wit I doubt whether the admirers of Belles Lettres in the world can furnish so much. She will give in three words what will make a volume." These blight and warm effusions of female friendship will form a striking contrast to the darker colours from the pencil of Walpole. See also Mrs. Carter's Letters to Mrs. Vesey, vol. iv. pp. 15, 47, and 108. Page 256. (Squire.) Appointed Bishop of St. David's on the death of Ellis. " Some circumstances of this affair induced people to think that the old ecclesiastical shop was quite shut up, for the Duke of Newcastle expressed great dissatisfaction at Squire's promotion, and even desired Bishop Young to tell everybody that he had no hand in it. Young answered, ' That he need not give himself the trouble, for Dr. Squire had told everybody so already; saying how much he was obliged to Lord Bute, lest it should be thought that he was obliged to any one else. What an excellent courtier ! ' See MS. letter in Notes and Queries, No. 5, Dec. 1, 1849. Page 255. On Sir Richard Lyttelton see Grenville Corre- spondence, iv. p. 528. Sir Richard's nephew, Thomas Pitt, afterwards Lord Camelford, erected an obelisk to his memory in the park at Boconnoc, in Cornwall, now the property of Lady Grenville. — " We set out from my house in the city to dine with our common friend Sir R. Lyttelton, a good-na- tured, generous, and benevolent man, by far the best of the family." See Glover's Memoirs, p. 86. Sir R. Lyttelton died Oct. 1, 1770. Page 25G. (The son: that is, Edward Wortley Montagu.) 514 ADDITIONAL NOTES. Of this accomplished, eccentric, and remarkable person no satisfactory or authentic account, so far as I know, has yet been given. Mrs. Piozzi calls him " the learned and highly- accomplished son of Lady Mary, who imbibed her taste and talents for sensual delights, who has been long known in Eng- land. It is not so known, perhaps, that there is a showy monu- ment erected to his memory at Padua, setting forth his variety and compass of knowledge in a long Latin inscription," &c. His real monument would be formed of as many strange and discordant materials as ever composed a human character. Page 257, note. Read " T. Pitt." Page 258. The story of Lord Peterborough and the canary- bird is also to be found in a publication called " The Hu- mourist," published in 1819, vol. ii. p. 223, as follows : — " Lord Peterborough when a young man, and about the time of the Revolution, had a passion for a lady who Avas fond of birds. She had seen and heard of a fine canary-bird at a coffee-house near Charing Cross, and entreated him to get it for her. The owner of it was a widow, and Lord Peterborough offered to buy it at a great price, which she refused. Finding there was no other way of coming at the bird, he determined to change it, and getting one of the same colour, with nearly the same marks, but which happened to be a hen, he went to the house. The mistress usually sat in a room behind the bar, to which he had easy access. Contriving to send her out of the way, he effected his purpose, and upon her return he took his leave. He continued to frecment the house to avoid suspicion, but forbore saying anything of the bird till about two years after, when taking occasion to speak of it, he said to the woman, ' I would have bought that bird of you, and you refused my money for it; I dare say you are by this time sorry for it.' — ' Indeed, Sir,' answered the woman, ' I am not, nor would I ADDITIONAL NOTES. 515 take any sum for him ; for, would you believe it ? from the time that our good King was forced to go abroad and leave us, the dear creature has not sung a note.' " This same story is also given, but not with so particular a mention of circumstances, in Hawkins's History of Music, vol. v. p. 304. Page 261. (Sir H. Erskine.) There is a publication called " A Narrative of what passed between Sir H. Erskine and Philip Thicknesse, Esq. relative to the publication of Lady M. W. Montagu's Letters and Poetry in 1766." See account of it in Monthly Eeview, 1766, vol. i. p. 396. Page 263. " I must not conclude without saying some- thing of our new Queen. She seems to me to behave with equal propriety and civility; though the common people are quite exasperated at her not being handsome, and the people at court laugh at her courtesies." See Orig. Letter to Hon. W. Robinson, in Notfs and Queries, Dec. 1, 1849, p. 67. Page 267. (Bickham.) This living, in the neighbour- hood of Mr. Hurd, was Loughborough. See Cradock's Memoirs, and Letter XLIII. note, p. 179. Page 274. For " Harcourt " read " Howard." Page 276. " Lord Talbot, who is in high favour, is Steward of the Household, and, with his usual spirit, has executed a scheme of economy, which, though much laughed at at first, is now much commended." — Orig. Letter to Hon. W. Robinson, Sept. 1761 ; see Notes and Queries, as before. 2 M 516 ADDITIONAL NOTES. Page 276. (Beckford.) " The great Mr. Beckford, whom no arguments can convince, nor defeat make ashamed, nor mistake make diffident, &c. . . . Mr. Pitt set forth the great importance and dignity of Mr. Beckford personally; above all, the dignity and importance of an Alderman, concluding it was a title he should be more proud of, than of a Peer." See Mrs. Montagu's Letters, vol. iv. p. 80. Page 279. (Dr. Morton.) Was this the Dr. Morton men- tioned in Southey's Doctor, vol. vi. p. 128? Dr. Morton's name, as that of librarian to the British Museum, was brought forward for his charge against Mrs. Macauley for destroying some pages of a MS. in the British Museum (Harl. MS. 7379). This MS. has a note in Dr. Morton's writing, that on such a day the MS. was delivered to Mrs. Macauley, and the same day the pages were found to be destroyed. See Monthly Review for 1794, and Disraeli's Literary Miscella- nies, p. 56. Page 281. On the subject of the pension given to Mr. Pitt, see Lord Brougham's Historical Sketches, art. "Chatham;" Lord Mahon's History of England, iv. p. 365 ; Pictorial History of the Eeign of George the Third r vol. i. p. 13 ; and an interesting and original letter to Honourable W; Robinson, dated 12 Oct. 1761, in Notes and Queries for Dec. 1, 1849, p. 65. Page 282. For " Gazette " read " Gazetteer." Page 283. (Musical glasses). They appear to have been invented by a person of the name of Pockrich, of whom a most singular account is given in the Life of Mr. J. C. Pilking- ton, extracted in the Monthly Review, 1761, pp. 14 — 19. He ADDITIONAL NOTES. 517 perished in the conflagration at Cornhill in 1759. For nine weeks before his death it is supposed he earned no less than six pounds a day by playing on his musical glasses. These glasses appear to have retained their place as instruments of music to the present day, and are now (1854) advertised in the newspapers — the professor being Mr. Brown, 7, Fins- bury Pavement. Page 288. Add on " Lowth's Grammar," the Monthly Re- view, vol. xxvii. p. 37. Page 290. (K. Hunter.) See on this lady, Churchill's Ghost :— Not all the virtues that we find Concentred in a Hunters mind, Can make her spare the rancorous tale," &c. " Miss Hunter, a lady of family and fortune. Maid of Honour to Queen Charlotte, eloped on the day of the coronation with the grandfather of the present Earl of Pembroke. On a table were found some lines from Pope's Eloisa. The King deprived Lord Pembroke of his military command, and struck him out of the Privy Councillors. After the death of Lord Pembroke, she was the wife of General Clarke ; and Colonel Montgomery, who was killed in a duel with Colonel Macnamara, was her son." See note in Churchill's Poems, by Mr. Tooke, the Editor, ed. Aid. vol. ii. p. 302. Page 293. For a curious note by Wilkes, intended for his edition of Churchill's Works, relating to his own personal appearance, see Southey's Doctor, vol. vi. p 112. Page 294. (Lady Coventry.) Mrs. Piozzi, whose testimony has not been called into court as yet on this subject, says, 2 m 2 518 ADDITIONAL NOTES. " True perfection of female beauty appeared among us in the form of Maria Gunning Attesting spectators have often manifested their just admiration by repeated bursts of applause to the countess, who, calling for her carriage one night at the theatre — / saw her — stretched out her arm with such a peculiar, such an inimitable manner, as forced a loud and sudden clap from all the pit and galleries, which she, conscious of her charms, delighted to increase and prolong, glancing round with a familiar smile to all the enraptured company." This is mentioned, as a curious picture of the feelings of the people and the manners of the times in 1760. An account of the last time her beautiful sister, the Duchess of Hamilton (afterwards Argyle), ever appeared at a public assembly, may be seen in Mr. Cradock's Memoirs, vol. i. p. 252, who was present, and he has described what he witnessed — the astonishment and delight which her extra- ordinary beauty occasioned. P. 300. The late Rev. J. Dixon, Canon of York, informed me by a letter, a few weeks previous to his death, " that this drawing by Gray of the chapel adjoining the cathedral at York, is very incorrect, and could not have been taken on the spot" Mr. Dixon adds, " that Gray was also mistaken about the ruin which Dean Markham restored, and appropriated to the cathedral library. It was probably the chapel of the Archbishop's palace, and not, as Gray supposed, the church of St. Sepulchre. The houses which he thought were the conventual buildings of St. Sepulchre, are all pre- bendal." Page 300. (Ludlam.) See account of the Ludlam family in Cradock's Literary Memoirs, vol. i. p. 2. " The elder brother, William, must be the person intended. He dedicated ADDITIONAL NOTES. 511) his volume, ' Experiments in Mechanics,' to Dr. Heberden, and received from him a magnificent set of instruments, for the re- ception of which a room was purposely fitted up at St. John's Col- lege, Cambridge." — Mr. Cradock, at p. 232, says " The Rev. Mr. Lud lam of St. John's College;" and mentions him in vol. iv. p. 2C0, as one of the persons Avho accompanied Goldsmith to see the Fantoccini in Panton Street, when the latter is said " for envy to have Avished to excel the dexterity of one of the puppets." In vol. iv. p. 83, of the same work, it is stated that the Rev. W. Ludlam was called by his particular friends John, possibly from being Fellow of St. John's College; and at p. 184, he calls him " my friend Johnny Ludlam;" which establishes the conjecture in the note. He was Rector of Cockfield, Suffolk, and Vicar of Norton, Leicestershire : he died in 1788. See Nichols's Literary Anecdotes, iii. p. G39; vii. pp. 239, 619. Page 309. (Song to David.) Mr. Dyce says, in a letter, " I have been trying in vain to find, what I am sure I have, an earlv edition of Smart's Song to David, printed in a thin quarto. I have found however a " Translation of the Psalms of David attempted in the spirit of Christianity, and adapted to the Divine Service, by Christopher Smart, 1765." 4to. It was pub- lished by subscription, and among the subscribers was " Mr. (!ray, of Pembroke Hall, two books." — In this volume the Psalms are followed by hymns and spiritual songs, and the concluding piece was a Song to David, consisting of eighty- six six-line stanzas; the first stanza ends — Determined, dared, and done. Mr. Dyce adds, " I beg leave to question the story of its having been originally indented icith a key on the ivainscot. What ! apoem of 576 lines ?" — "The Song to David," 4to. Is. was reviewed in 520 ADDITIONAL NOTES. the Monthly Review, April 1763, a little before Gray's letter was written (p. 320), and was praised. — " A Song to David, by Christopher Smart, M.A. 4to. Is. Fletcher." The story told by Anderson of the manner in which it was written was taken from this article in the Review. — " It would be cruel to insist on the slight defects and singularities of the piece, for many reasons, and more especially if it be true, as we are in- formed, that it was written when the author was denied the use of pen, ink, and paper, and was obliged to indent his lines with the end of a key upon the wainscot." — See also Critical Review, April 1763, p 324, and July, p. 72, on the same poem. The criticism at p. 395 ends thus: — " But we will say no more of Mr. Smart. Peace be to the manes of his departed muse ! Our sentiments with regard to this unfortunate gen- tleman are such as every man must feel on the same melan- choly occasion. If our readers are desirous to know what they are we must refer them to the fine lines at the end of Mr. Churchill's Epistle to Hogarth." * Page 309. This person, Frog Walker, must not be con- founded with another of the same name, Mr. John Walker, also Fellow of Trinity College; whose notes may be seen in Davies's edition of Cicero de Natura Deorum, and are * An epigram commonly said to have been written by Smart on Gray is well known to many persons, though not printed; beginning " Some persons say that Gray has wit," &c. They may be surprised to hear that Smart was not the author, nor Gray the subject. It appeared in a volume called " The Peregrinations of Jere- miah Grant, Esq. the West Indian,'" l^mo. 176:3. It was written on his sister-in-law, and begins: — " Grant, they say, has wit, And some have felt it,' 1 &c. See the passage quoted in the review of the book in Critical Review, vol. xv. p. 18. ADDITIONAL NOTES. 521 justly commended by Le Clerc in his Bibliotheque Ancienne, torn. xi. ]>. 180. Page 311. Algarotti was one of the five non-military per- sons admitted into the Peace-Class of the Order of Merit, in- stituted by Frederick the Great. Voltaire and Maupertuis also received the favour. He died 17G5. The intrigue which took place between Algarotti and Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, while the latter was abroad, and the result of it, was, so far as I know, first discovered and revealed by Lord Byron, in consequence of his having obtained possession of the MS. letters of Algarotti's correspondents. See Life of Lord Byron by Moore, vol. iii. p. 214 — 240, ed. Paris. — " Algarotti seems to have treated her ill, but she was much his senior," &c. See on this subject Lady Blessington's Life by Madden, vol. ii. p. 32G and p. 351. Lady B. in 1838, tried in vain, through the Countess Guiccioli, to recover these letters, which were said to be in the possession of an innkeeper at Venice. Page 317. On Humphrey Cotes, see Wilkes's Letters in GrenviJle Correspondence, iv. pp. 3 — 1(1. Page 323. (Mr. Nicholls.) To the interesting account given of this accomplished and amiable person by Mr. Mathias (see Gray's Works by Mathias, vol i. p. 516), 1 may add here a few lines from the pen of another gen- tleman of talent who visited him in his house at Blundes- ton; he says, — " I was introduced to Mr. Nicholls, more than half a century ago, by Mr. Floyer, of Portland Place, who was, I believe, a distant relation. Mr. Nicholls kindly invited me to visit him at his house in Suffolk, where 1 met a most pleasant society. He appeared delighted to shew his great improvements which he had made in the grounds at a small 522 ADDITIONAL NOTES. expense, ' by painting,' as he called it, ' with nature.' That is to say, he cut the trees so as to produce a picturesque effect, occasionally introducing a broken branch to break a too-formal line. Upon the whole the effect was excellent. Mr. Nicholls was particularly neat in his person and most polished in his manners. He spoke of Gray as having more learning than Gibbon," &c. This agreeable spot has, since Mr. Nicholls's death, been let and sold to various persons, and has been much altered, as I have found in the visits I have occasionally paid to it. Page 338. On the Bedford Eiots in 1765, see Grenville Correspondence, iii. p. 164 " The Duke of Bedford showed him (Mr. Grenville) a stone of five or six pounds weight which had been thrown at him into his chariot. He parried the blow with his hand, which was wounded by it, notwith- standing which it had struck his temple," &c p. 168. Page 338. On the embassy to Hayes, see Macaulay's Life of Lord Chatham, p. 112. To the note at this page, in which mention is made of the grounds at Hayes being laid out by the hand of the great minister, who prided hinfself, to use his own phrase, " on the prophetic eye of taste," I may add mention of others which have come to my knowledge, from visits which I have paid to them, and which may still, I think, interest a few who may not dislike to follow the foot- steps of the great minister even in those amusements, in which his still greater son fully participated; and I have the authority of the late Lord Grenville for saying, not without success. Lord Chatham's hand of design then may be seen, 1st. in the grounds of Hayes, near Bromley, his favourite seat, in the plantations and the little lake with its island; 2dly. at South Lodge, near Enfield, in the water and views over what ADDITIONAL NOTES. 523 was at that time the Forest, or Chace, though now enclosed and cultivated. See some account of this interesting place when inhabited by Miss Sharpe, after Mr. Pitt had left it, in Mrs. Carter's Correspondence with Mrs. Vesey, vol. iv. p. 142. In 1781 it was still a Forest. " One nerer for a minute, while there, loses the idea of being in a forest." P. 295. The small Palladian bridge is to be found both there and at Hayes; 3dly. at Burton Pynsent, in Somersetshire, in the. plantations ; 4thly. at what was Mr. Bilson Legge's, in Holt Forest, Farn- ham, in the formation and disposition of the water. We recollect of whom it was said. "Ne amplius tribunitiis injuriis vexaretur, in Linternam villain concessit, ubi reliqnam egit aetatem sine urbis desiderio." Page 347. (Carlisle history.) Many pamphlets appeared at the time on this subject, some of which are noticed in Monthly Review, 1765. The trial took place April 16-17, 1765, in Westminster Hall, in full Parliament. "A less inno- cent notoriety," says the biographer of Lord Byron, " attached itself to two other members of the Byron family; one the grand-uncle of the poet, the other his father. The former, in 176o, stood his trial, before the House of Peers, for killing in a duel, or rather in a scuffle, his relative and neighbour, Mr. Chaworth; and the latter, Captain John Byron, father of the poet, having carried off to the continent the Avife of Lord Carmarthen, and daughter of Lord Holdernesse ; on the noble Marquis obtaining a divorce from the lady, he married her. Of this short union, Augusta Byron, wife of Colonel Leigh, was issue." See Moore's Life of Byron, vol. i. p. 6, ed. Paris; and see Burke's Celebrated Trials, in which the evidence is given, p. 143; also Millingen's History of Duelling, vol. ii. p. 60. See also Walpole's Misc. Corr. vol. vi. p. 28, in a letter to Lady Browne. 52 -t ADDITIONAL NOTES. Page 350. (Lowth.) Dr. Hurd informs us, that on the subject of this famous quarrel between Lowth and Warburton he could say a great deal, for he was well acquainted with the grounds and progress of it ; " but, besides that I purpose avoid entering into details of this sort, I know of no good end that is likely to be answered by exposing to public censure the weaknesses of such men." See Life of Warburton, p. 60. It is probably not unknown to my readers, that Dr. Parr always con- sidered, and openly stated his belief, that this Life of Warburton by Hurd was much altered, and that many things were suppressed in consequence of the biographer's previous knowledge, that it was Dr. Parr's intention to exercise his critical knowledge on its statements and opinions. Page 352. (Married.) An anecdote, on good authority, is told of this lady, that, on the morning of the marriage, and after the ceremony was concluded, Mason presented his bride with a complimentary copy of verses, which she, without looking at them, crumpled up and thrust into her pocket ! Page 354. Dele the note after " Lord Chatham," and insert " For a reasonable and judicious defence of Mr. Pitt's accepting the peerage, see Macaulay's Life of Lord Chatham, p. 132 (Trav. Library);" and Burke's opinion in Editor's note to Walpole's Misc. Corr. vol. iv. p. 185, and Editor's note to Walpole's Memoirs of George the Third, vol i. p. 83. Page 358. See Walpole's Letters to Sir Horace Mann, vol. i. p 317, instead of" History of George the Third, p 87," which was an error of the transcriber. Page 3G0. The unfortunate Dr. Brown is mentioned onlv once, and then in a cursory manner, in Hurd's Life of War- burton, at p. 35, where a more particular and detailed account ADDITIONAL NOTES. 52-") might have been expected. A passage in the letter of Mrs Carter may be of service in elucidating the circumstances which led to the temporary depression of l)r. Brown's mind, and termi- nated in the unhappy catastrophe. "lie appeared to me to have considerable talents, and to have applied them to the service of virtue; and 1 think he was by no means regarded in the manner which his merit as an author deserved. The world, which shews great lenity to open and profligate wick- edness, never gives a favourable turn to a doubtful conduct. Dr. Brown was abused and neglected principally, I imagine, because he found the measures of persons, which he had too hastili/ approved, less deserving than he had thought them. 1 think it is very probable that the cruel sarcasms which were thrown out against him in the papers, might exasperate the sufferings of a disturbed mind. It plainly appears, by his letters to Dr. Lowth, that he was extremely sensible to the treat- ment which he had received from the world." Memoirs, vol. ii. p. 339. Dr. Brown's writings Avere, for the most part, reviewed with considerable severity in the leading journal of the day, the Monthly Review; ex. gr. see "The Thoughts on Civil Liberty, by the author of Essays on the Characteristics," 1765, March, pp. 169-17 1 . &c. The great anxiety which the sudden and unhappy death of Dr, Brown gave to Mason, as shewn in the Correspondence, may excuse some further expla- nation of the circumstances attending the connection of their names. It appears that Dr. Brown had given offence to both Warburton and Mason, under wdiose patronage he commenced his literary career ; to the former by the free- dom of his opinions in his letter to Dr. Lowth; to the latter by a passage in his "Essay on Poetry and Music," of which the Reviewer says, — "In the twelfth section, which treats of the state and separation of poetry and music among the polished nations of Europe, the writer /«/.« visibly gone out 526 ADDITIONAL NOTES. of his way to express his contempt of the dramatic poem of a contemporary bard; but, notwithstanding this pointed censure, we presume that Caractacus will be allowed by any judge of poetry to be much superior in point of composition to AthelstanP See Monthly Review, 1763. The passage alluded to by the Reviewer occurs at p. 197 of Dr. Brown's volume, in which Mason's poetry is clearly alluded to, though not named: — " The misfortune was, that even tragedy and ode, whose end is to shake the soul with terror, pity, or joy, by a theatrical ex- hibition, and the powers of music, even these, in many instances and in different periods, were divorced from their assistant arts, and became the languid amusement of the closet. For, being often written by retired and speculative men, unacquainted with the workings of the human soul, and attending only to the external form and poetic ornaments of the Greek drama; their vanity hath been either to soar or dive into obscurity, to substitute mere imagery in the place of passion, to plan and write in a cold style, so far removed from nature, as to be incapable of a living representation — in a word, to compose tra- gedies that cannot be acted, and odes that cannot be sung." — This appeared in July 1763, and was an attack on Mason in his tenderest part, that could not be forgiven. In June 1764 came out " Remarks on some Objections in Dr. Brown's Dissertation on Poetry and Music," which the Reviewer calls "Avery angry and sarcastic reply to the learned and ingenious author." Also in the same year " Some. Observations on Dr. Brown's Disserta- tion, &c. in a Letter to Dr. Brown * * *, 4to." of which the Reviewer observes, " The adventurous Doctor has now met a formidable opponent," &c. p. 130. Whether Mason was con- nected with this controversy of course does not appear, but he was not of a temper or disposition to let censure of his great poetical work pass by unnoticed or unavenged. As regards the offence given to Warburton, the Monthly Review, vol. xxv. ADDITIONAL NOTES. 527 p. 226, 1766, maybe referred to in the article on the fifth edition of the Divine Legation. " On comparing the fourth edition, published last year, with the one now before us, the firsl thought that struck us was the omission of ihe following note in page 20 of Dedication to Free Thinkers. — ' See this matter, and what else relates to Ridicule as the Test of Truth, explained at large and in a very just and elegant manner by Mr. Brown, in his first Essay on the Characteristics.' — What can be the meaning of this omission ? If this note was proper in 1765, does it cease to be so in 1766 ? There is certainly some mystery in the' affair, and how to account for it in a satisfactory manner we really know not. It occurred to us at first that his Lordship might probably be offended with Dr. Brown on account of his letter to Dr. Lowth, and that therefore , but this supposition carried in it something so little, so mean, and so illiberal, that we immediately rejected it ; we therefore leave it to our more sagacious readers to account for this matter." This article, Avritten either by Dr. Brown, or by a friendly hand which he guided, appeared on the first of September, the very month of Dr. Brown's death. At this time Dr. Brown had not only offended both Warburton and Mason, and was constantly engaged in critical disputes regarding his numerous publica- tions, as appears in the reviews of the time (see par- ticularly Critical Review, vol. xv. p. 241, where he is called " the great Dr. Brown, the multiform, inimitable, universal genius of the age ; the poet, the playwright, the philosopher, the dictator, the musician, the divine; a gentleman who — ■ " In one revolving moon Is statesman, poet, fiddler," &c. ; vol. xxi. p. 75 — 79); but the anger of his adversaries seems at length to have descended into the language of 528 ADDITIONAL NOTES. contempt. " Not that his ability to offend others," writes his reviewer, " or defend himself, is the formidable part of his character ; but the patience, the perseverance, the happy indifference with which he hath learned to bear a Seating, as effectually baffle the designs of his opponents as if he was clad in a warm doublet. It is doubtless the consciousness of this, his forte, that makes him lay himself so notoriously open; for to those who can so magnanimously support a defeat, it is of little consequence who gets the victory."' Vol. xxxiii. p. 167. Such are some of the circum- stances which, acting on a disposition of excessive vanity and irritability, may tend to throw light on the subject, so far as it is shown in Gray's letters. Whatever else may have occurred of a different kind, still further to overthrow a mind perplexed and enfeebled by disease, may be found in the pages of his biography, but does not belong to the purpose I have in view, which is only to attempt to explain the allusion to Mason, as connected with Dr. Brown's melancholy history Page 364. On Mr. Prowse see Walpole's Memoirs of George the Third, vol. i. p. 87 (Editor's note), and Grenville Corre- spondence, vol. i. pp. 397, 398, 402. Page 366. (Dr. Richmond.) In Dec. 1764 was published " Sermons and Discourses on several Subjects and Occasions. By R. Richmond, LL.D. Chaplain to his Grace the Duke of Atholl, and Vicar of Walton, Lancashire, 4to. 10s. 6c?." This volume was published with an unusually large subscrip- tion. Page 372. For " Gray's allusion," in the note, read " Ma- son s. ADDITIONAL NOTES. 52'. > Page379. For" Wadsvrorth," read" Wadworth."— " Mason's relations were Mr. and Mrs. Wordsworth, who lived at Wad- worth, near Doncaster. Mrs. Wordsworth was a firsl cousin of Mason, and her brother the Rev. Arthur Robinson suc- ceeded Mr. Dixon as Vicar of Hull. He and his wife are the Robinsons mentioned at p. 400." MS. Letter from Rev. Mr. Dixon to the Editor. Page 382. For " Bantry" read " Bawtry ;" and so p. 388, line nit. Page 384. Lord Holland landed in England from Italy 17f>7. On an ancient altar, says Mr. Pennant, the present Lord Holland thought fit to renew his devotion to the god of the altar in this form : — Ob salutem in Italia Anno 1767 recuperatam banc columnam olim D. iEsculapio sacratam, nunc etiam dicat dedicatque Holland. Page 385. This is a separate Letter, alluded to in Letter CVTIL, and should therefore have preceded it. Page 385. " The Duke of York invited Lady C. Edwin to his play on Saturday." See Grenville Correspondence, iv. p. 227. Page 386. (Calista.) Miss Delaval married Sir William Stanhope. " No expense," says Mr. Cradock, " was spared that her natural genius might be improved during her travels on the continent. She spoke French and Italian correctly, and had great taste both for painting and sculpture. As we were retiring from a survey of the old Louvre, one of 530 ADDITIONAL NOTES. the Academicians said, ' Have you many more such ladies in England ? she is indeed a prodigy.' Lady Stanhope still retained her attachment to the stage, and had not forgot that her brother Lord Delaval, and her sister Lady Mexborough, and herself, had formerly played in the tragedy of Jane Shore, and that the late Duke of York had undertaken the character of Lord Hastings. All was well constructed, and it is still in the recollection of many friends that Mr. Garrick spoke praisingly of the whole performance." See Memoirs, ii. p. 82. It appears that that experienced actor MacMin was selected to superintend these private theatricals, and to instruct the Duke of York in the science of acting. — " In 1764 several plays were represented at Privy Gardens by persons of eminence and distinction, and the performances were ac- knowledged to be equal to any ever seen on a regular theatre, and conferred the highest honour on the skill of Mr. Macklin, who instructed the noble performers, and managed the whole," &c. Sir Francis Delaval, Mr. J. Delaval (afterwards Lord Delaval), and a younger Mr. Delaval acted at private theatricals with much talent and success. See Life of Charles Mackbin, by J. T. Kirkman, vol. i. p. 336 and p. 463. Page 387. (Rousseau.) It is called " A concise and genuine account of the dispute between Mr. Hume and Mr. Rousseau, with the letters that passed between them, during their con- troversy, as also the letters of the Honourable H. Walpole and Mr. D'Alembert, relative to this extraordinary affair," trans- lated from the French, 8vo. 1766. For other works on the same subject, see Critical Review, vol. xxii. p. 376-378, 1786, where the charges against Mr. Hume are enumerated ironi- cally under sixteen separate heads. See also Private Corre- spondence of David Hume, between 1761 and 1776, 4to. 1820, first published from the originals. ADDITIONAL NOTES. 531 Page 395. For " Bridgnorth " read " Broadsworth," a little village a few miles from Doncaster, for above a century in the Kimioul family Page 399. For "Barnard Castle," see Lockhart's Life of Scott, vol. ii. p. 385. Page 399. (Rokeby.) " The last possessor of ' Rokeby ' was ruined during the civil wars, and the estates were pur- chased by the Robinsons. The Long Sir Thomas Robinson sold the place and estates in 1709 to Mr. Morritt." See Lockhart's Life of Scott, vol. ii. p. 3G4, and Walpole's Misc. Letters, vol. i. p. 82. In the note, for " Morris " read " Morritt." Churchill, in his poem, " The Ghost," says, " And Robinson was Aquitaine," on the Coronation of George the Third; but the Duke of Normandy (not Aquitaine) was repre- sented by Sir Thomas Robinson. See Churchill's Poems, ed. Aid. vol. iii. p. 57. Lord Rokeby, 1777, Primate of Ireland, was an excellent prelate, and expended a considerable part of his large fortune in improving Armagh. Page 400. For title of letter, " Mason to Gray," read " To the Rev. William Mason," and in the same manner Letters CXXII. and CXXIV. Page 402. (Epitaph, her bier.) The Rev. Joseph Hunter informs me that he copied the inscription from the wall, and that it reads, " its bier." If so, it must be the mistake of the stonecutter. Page 407, line 11. Put comma after " home, Sept. 5th, in a heavy thundershower." Page 407. On the Hon. C. Townshend's death see Grenville Correspondence, iv. p. 158. Page 410. (Aldersea) The Rev. J. Hunter doubts if the Burton vicar could be shewn to be descended from the author 2 N 532 ADDITIONAL NOTES. of the Anatomy of Melancholy: a Mr. Palgrave married one of the daughters of the Vicar of Halifax, and Mr. Richard Lawson, Lord Mayor of York, another. The Lawsons of Boroughbridge descended from this marriage. Page 417. (Delaval family.) "In England talents claim power to cast a gleam of glory on their lineage, and the name of Boyle is considered by every one as greater, for that sole reason, I suppose, than Delaval, although his pedigree be drawn from Harold of Norway." — Piozzi. See Pedigree of the Dela- val family, among Barons Extinct, in Collins's Peerage, vol. ix. p. 438. Page 419. (Last line.) For " Letters," read " Languages." Page 424. On the King of Denmark in England, see Grenville Correspondence, iv. pp. 342, 3G5. In Mad. de Genlis' Memoirs a ridiculoiis story is told of the King, who, when he was in France, mistook the play of Arlequin Barbier Parali- tique for a compliment to himself, and kept acknowledging it by bows to the audience, for he knew French very imper- fectly: and Mrs. Carter* says, "I have agreed with you in wishing that the King of Denmark was to see Hamlet on our stage; my nephew saw him at Macbeth, and says his Majesty was extremely attentive to Mr. Garrick, though I do not find that he understood a word of English." Letters to Mrs. Mon- tague, vol. ii. p. 11. Page 42G. (Dr. G .) Dr. Gisborne was the second son of the Rev. James Gisborne, Rector of Staveley, Derby- shire, and Prebendary of Durham. He had three brothers ; the eldest a General in the army. * See Letter of Mrs. Carter to Mrs. Vesey "on her party on Friday (1 765) to meet Mr. Gray, hoping your passion for him continues in full force, to which I give my free consent, notwithstanding your leing so very clear that he was made on purpose for me" &c. See Letters to Miss Talbot vol. iii. 255. See also her judgment of the Installation Ode at p. 368. ADDITIONAL NOTES. .">.",:; Page 420. (Jeux d' esprit.) Mr. Cradock says, " From time to time 1 had treasured up many bon mots of Mr. Gray communicated by Mr. Tyson, and by the former fellow col- legian of Mr. Gray, Rev. Mr. Sparrow of Walthamstow, who was always attentive to his witty allusions. Some of these have been printed inaccurately, and freely bestowed on others in the Johnsoniana." See Mem. i. p. 184, and see also iv. p. 225. " It is said that many light satires have been given to him that he did not write, but certainly very like him," &c. Page 428. The late Mr. Dixon, in a letter, Nov. 25, 1852, writes, " The Dr. Thomas I have mentioned (p. 428) was Dr. Hugh Thomas, made, in 1750, by Archbishop Hutton, Chancellor of York, and Rector of Elton, of which parish 1 am now the incumbent. He came to York, as Chaplain to the Archbishop, from Bangor, and had a variety of prefer- ments. He was Archdeacon of Wells, Prebendary of Stil- lington, and the Archbishop wished to secure him a Residentiaryship, but was successfully opposed by Dean Fountayne." Page 429. (Foljambe.) Dele "Home." Mr. Foljambe's original name was "Moore;" he took the name of Foljamhe on his accession to the family estates. He had been a pupil of Mr. Wood, Mason's Curate at Aston, and was a great friend of Mason's, till, in Mason's latter days, an estrangement took place between them, on some political ground. Massinger's " Maid of Honour" was dedicated to an ancestor of this gentle- man, " Sir Fr. Foljambe, and Mr. Th. Blair." " I had not to this time subsisted," says the poet, " but that I was supported by your frequent courtesies and favours." Page 430. For " Aldweston," read " Aldwerk." Page 433. " I had been very ill at the time." MS. note by Mr. Stonhewer. 2 n 2 534 ADDITIONAL NOTES. Page 437. (Greffiers.) Perhaps an allusion to Mr. Fagel, Greffier of Holland, and a near relative to Lady Holdernesse, who lived to be above 90. An account of a visit to him at the Hague may be read in Mrs. Carter's Memoirs, vol. i. p. 345. He is often alluded to as " the venerable and patriotic old Greffier " in her Letters, vol. iii. p. 277, " as deeply feeling the public disturbances and calamities of his country" (in 1787). He was a person of learning. His library was purchased by Trinity College, Dublin. Page 439, line 3. For " Barber," read " Baker." Page 439. On the " remonstrance," the speech of Beck- ford, see Grenville Correspondence, iv. p. 517. "He died three weeks afterwards, from the effect of a violent fever, caused, as was supposed, by political excitement." As a public monument has been erected by the city of London in honour of their patriotic magistrate, it is certainly interesting to know as exactly as we can on what grounds his claim to that honour has been derived. I therefore again consulted my late friend Mr. Maltby, who says that Mr. Home Tooke told him, " that he with others was waiting at the Mansion House when Beckford returned from St. James's ; that he was asked what he had said ? and his answer was, that he was so flurried that he could not remember any part of it. ' But,' said Home Tooke, ' it is necessary that a speech should be given to the public,' and accordingly he went into a room and wrote the one which is attributed to Beckford." Mr. Maltby said that Home Tooke invariably mentioned the speech as his composition; and that some years since he (Mr. Maltby) had a request from the corporation of the city to give them some information on this point. Page 440. On the " Anglesey case," add Monthly Review, vol. xxxi. p. 468. The celebrated "Anglesey case" forms the ADDITIONAL NOTES. 535 foundation of the story of " Le Forester, a tale, 3 vols. 8vo. 1802, by Sir Egerton Brydges." He calls the case "one of the longest, most laborious, and most curious trials of filiation that ever occurred before a jury; a trial which fills a printed folio volume." See the details of this case in Burke's Cele- brated Trials, p. 249-271. Page 441. For " St." read " Stonhewer." Page 443. (Fitzherbert.) There is mention of the future Lord St. Helen's in T. Moore's Memoirs, v. ii p. 50. There is an engraving of him, full length, sitting at a table, from a drawing of Edridge, a private plate; and there is also another print representing him in the Windsor uniform. Page 444. Dr. Heberden's interest procured Mason a Fellowship at Pembroke Hall, when there was none open to him at his own college at St. John's. Lord Monboddo calls Dr Ileberden " a worthy and learned gentleman of my acquaintance in London," and mentions his being indebted to him for pointing out a remarkable passage in Seneca (Controv. c. 8), in which Lord M. thought he saw a descrip- tion of the Trinity, but certainly without sufficient reason. See Origin of Language, vol. v. p. 339 : see also Hurd's Life of Warburton, p. 56, note. Page 448. Adam, Robert and John, brothers (1728 — 1792), built Lansdowne House, Berkeley Square, for the Marquess of Bute, by whom they were patronised, as also his mansion at Luton; Caen Wood, Lord Mansfield's; the Adelphi Terrace, &c. A further account of them may be seen in the Penny Cyclopaedia, written by Mr. Hosking, and in Cunningham's Handbook of London. Page 449, note. (L. Smelt.) See Memoirs of Dr. Burney, vol. ii. p. 399, vol. iii. p. 80, on Mr. Leonard Smelt; for a 536 ADDITIONAL NOTES. \ery high character of him, and some romantic incidents in liis! life, see Walpole's Memoirs of George the Third, vol. iv. p. 312, and Mrs. Carter's Letters to Mrs. Vesey, vol. iv. p. 174 and p. 290. Page 450. Mr. Powell and Mr. Balguy, two highly dis- tinguished young men, were tutors at St. John's College when Mason was there. It was through them that he was intro- duced to Dr. Hurd. There are some lines written by Mason when an Undergraduate of St. John's, in which the former is mentioned : — " Then, Goddess, gild the finished scene, With gentle Powell's placid mien; Then round his form let groups of Graces throng," &c. An account of him and his works may be seen in the Biogra- phical Dictionary; born 1717, died 1775. (Rev. Dr. William Samuel Powell.) Page 452. The Poems and Translations, by Francis Hoy- land, B.A., 4to., reviewed in Monthly Eeview, 17C3, vol. i, p. 329, and in Critical Review, vol. xvi. p. 55-58, 1763. Page 454, Letter CXXXV. This letter, which has no date, but was apparently written soon after the event which it records, should be inserted after Letter CXXIV., at p. 430. The hearse-day was on March 22nd, 17G9. Page 458. In the Gentleman's Magazine, April, 1817, p. 296, is an article on Gray's last will and testament, signed " Ebor." t';ige 458. Mr. Bonstetten's later publications were — 1. " Kccherche* stir la Nature ct les Lois de lTmagi- nation." ADDITIONAL NOTES. 537 2. "Etudes de L'Homme; ou, Recherchea but les Facultcs de sentir et de penser. Geneve, L821." 2 vols. His various and interesting works have not been, I believe, uniformly collected, nor have they gained that attention in this country which their merits would entitle them 1" claim. A life of him, occupying ten pages, is in the Biographie Universelle; and another, which is different, in the Kncyclo- pedie des Gens du Monde. In his German correspondence with Matthisson and Frederica Bran the earliest notices of his career are given. Page, 4G4. This Letter from Dr. Wharton was not ad- dressed to Mason, but to Mr. Mathias. The present mentioned was the volume of Runic Odes which appeared in 17iSl; and " the compliment you pay to the memory of Mr. Gray," must refer to the Villa Formiana, p. G2, being an allusion to Gray's lines on Lord Holland : — " Frustra Severus, carmine quis notet Injurioso delicias sibi, Ah ! parce, Lucili, precamur Fulminea metuende Lyra.'" * Mr. Hall Stevenson (author of Crazy Tales, &c.) has a poem called " Namia Monastica," in Leonine verses, the .subject being the death of Gray: — " Hrec inter tristia, Graii tristis Queritur umbra, tristior istis, Nee apud mortuos colonua Macstus, mrcstitiae ponit onus," &c. * " Kingsgate, where C. Fox*3 father scattered buildings of all sorts, but in no style of architecture that has ever appeared before or since, and in no connexion with or to any other, and in all directions ; and yet the oddity and number made that naked though fertile soil smile and look cheerful. /),, you remember Gray^s oitU r lines on him, and his vagaries and histofyV H. Walpole to the Misses Berry. See Correspondence, vol. vi. 514. 538 ADDITIONAL NOTES. It is dated Old Park Abbey, the seat of his friend Dr. Wharton, Dec. 2G, 1773. It is also imitated in English. See Poems, vol. ii. p. 210. Page 482. Being ignorant of the circumstances of the favour which Gray received from the Duchess of Northum- berland, I expressed my disbelief of Mr. Barbier's statement; but subsequently I have found it confirmed, though without any mention of particulars : — " Mr. Gray the Poet (thus writes the Rev. Mr. Maurice in his memoir of himself,) had in a par- ticular instance been befriended by the Duchess of Northum- berland ;" to which Mr. Maurice, in an address to the Shade of the recently-deceased Poet, alluded, in some lines of his Elegy on the Duchess, beginning (as quoted at p. 144 of his Memoirs): " Rise, thou dear child of Fancy and the Nine, Whom Nature at thy awful birth endow'd With rage to soar above the rhyming crowd, And kindled in thy breast the spark divine That flash'd resistless through thy fervid line." The Letter of Mason to Gray, dated April 15, 1771, closes this Correspondence.* In a letter on the 24th of May, Gray says, " I have had a cough on me these three months', which is incurable. The approaching summer I have sometimes had thoughts of spending on the Continent, but I have now dropped that intention, and believe my expeditions "will terminate at Old Park ; but I make no promise, and can answer for nothing. My old enemy the gout so sticks in my stomach, and troubles my conscience; and yet bear it I must, or cease to exist Till this year I hardly knew what (mechanical) low spirits were, but now I even tremble at an east wind." About the time * See Gray's Letters, vol. iv. pp. 199, xix. ed. Aid. by which it will be seen that the last letter given in Mason's edition is one compounded l>/ him of letters of August 24, 1770, and May 24, 1771, with interpolations, omis- sions, ami transpositions: this plan, as I have observed, being systematically pursued throughout the whole Correspondence. ADDITIONAL NOTES. 539 he wrote this letter he removed to London, where his feverish complaint increased. " By Dr. Gisborne's advice he removed to Kensington, where he got so much better as to return to Cambridge, meaning from thence to set out for Old Park, in hopes that travelling would complete the cure; but on the 24th July he was seized with illness, and died on the 30th." — (Mason.) To this account by Mason of the closing days of Gray, I may add, from another hand, the latest touch that was given to the living portrait. It occurs in the Kev. Mr. Gilpin's Dedication of his Tour on the Wye to Mason; and he thus writes — " In the same year in which this little journey was made, your late valued friend Mr. Gray made it likewise; and, hearing that I had put on paper a few remarks on the scenes which he had so lately visited, he desired a sight of them. They were then only in a rude state, but the hand- some things he said of them to a friend of his (Wm. Fraser, esq., Under-Secretary of State), who obligingly repeated them tome, gave them I own some little degree of credit in my own opinion, and made me somewhat less apprehensive in risking them before the public. If this little work afforded any amusement to Mr Gray, it was the amusement of a very late period of his life. He saw it in London about the beginning of June 177 1 , and he died you know at the end of July following. Had he lived, it is possible he might have been inclined to have assisted me with a few of his own remarks on scenes which he had so accurately examined. The slightest touches of such a master would have had their effect. No man was a greater admirer of nature than Mr. Gray, nor admired it with better taste." P. 5. And now I cannot more satisfactorily close these notes on the lighter and more familiar writings of Gray, than by quoting a 5^0 ADDITIONAL NOTES- passage from one whose rectitude of judgment, on all moral questions, I have been accustomed to look up to with high respect, and whose praise of those whom he admires, is not seldom bestowed in a willing and generous vindication of them from the hasty and unjust censure of others. The passage to which I allude occurs in a discussion intended to show that " the occasional longings for death, which good men may feel, when tired and satiated with earthly enjoyments, are care- fully to be distinguished from a wish for annihilation," &c. Mr. Dugald Stewart observes, " Such seems to have been the state of Gray's mind when he wrote his Ode to his friend Mr. West, ' Barbaras iEdes,' " &c. ; in this ode the following stanzas occur: — O ! Ego felix vice si (nee unquaiu Surgerem rursus) simili cadentera Parca me lenis sineret quieto Fallere Letho. Multa flagranti, radiisque cincto Integris ah ! quam nihil inviderem Cum Dei ardentes medius quadrigas Sentit Olympus. In the Appendix to a work entitled " Memoirs of Dr. Joseph Priestley/' written by himself, with a continuation by his Son, Joseph Priestley, these stanzas are emoted as a proof that Gray did not look forward with anxious hope to a future state. See App. No. II. p. 318. The authors of this Appendix, we are given to understand in the title-page, were Thomas Cooper, President Judge of the South District of Pennsylvania, and the Rev. William Christie. In replying to these remarks I have only to refer the reader to the second volume of Gray's Works by Mason, p. 140, Letter XXXI. from Mr. Gray to .\h-. Stonhewer." See Dngald Stewart on the Active and Moral Powers, vol. ii. p. 201. ADDITIONAL NOTES. Page xxii. (Composition.) Some of the reflections which were cast by Goldsmith on Gray's poetical style, may be found in his Life of Parnell ; ex. gr. " Parnell is ever happy in the selection of his images, and scrupulously careful in the choice of his subjects. His productions bear no resemblance to those tawdry things which it has for some time been the fashion to admire, in writing which, the poet sits down without any plan, and heaps up splendid images without any selection ; where the reader grows dizzy with praise and ad- miration, and yet soon grows weary he can scarce tell why. It is indeed amazing, after what has been done by Dryden, Addison, and Pope, to improve and harmonise our native tongue, that their successors should have taken so much pains to involve it in a pristine barbarity. These misguided inno- vators have not been content with restoring antiquated words and phrases, but have indulged themselves with most licentious transpositions, and the harshest constructions ; vainly ima- gining that the more their writings are unlike prose, the more they resemble poetry. They have adopted a language of their own, and call upon mankind for approbation. From these tollies and affectations the poems of Parnell are entirely free; he has considered the language of poetry as the language of life, and conveys the warmest thoughts in the simplest expression." Subsequently these expressions are identified with the poetry of Gray: — " The Night Piece on Death de- serves every praise, and I should suppose, with very little amendment, might be made to surpass all those Night Pieces and Churchyard Scenes that have since appeared." — The Critical Reviewer makes the following observations on the passage quoted above: "We do not think that even Dr. Goldsmith could make this poem (i. e. Parnell *s Night Piece) 542 ADDITIONAL NOTES. better than it is j but we are very certain, if it was improved by the best amendments he could give it, it would still be far inferior to the celebrated ' Elegy in a Country Churchyard.' We do not implicitly admire all Mr. Gray's poems, because he shews himself so great a poet in tins admirable elegy ; but we think that a lover and judge of poetry would rather have been the author of this elegy, than of all that Dr. Parnell wrote, or of all that Dr. Goldsmith has written. When he talked contemptuously of all the Churchyard Scenes, he must have thrown an invidious eye on Mr. Gray," &c. See Crit. Rev. vol. xxx. p. 50. Page 99. (Mr. Franklin, I am told.) This appears not to have been the case, for in the review of " A Poetical Epistle to Mr. Samuel Johnson, A.M., by Mr. Murphy," the writer makes the following observations : " Mr. Franklin in his Essay [on Tragedy'] has treated the works of Mr. Murphy with such rio-our as fair criticism would not authorise, and now Mr. Murphy, in revenge, mentions Mr. Franklin in contemptuous terms, which in our opinion are misapplied. Among other strictures he is stigmatised with a reproach from which we think it our duty to vindicate his reputation. Mr. Murphy in a note observes, that a Greek professor mistakes the jEolian 1 'I re for the JEolian harp, and gave to the modern Mr. Oswald that which by classic authority belongs to the ancient Sappho. This, we own, was certainly a mistake in one of the authors who, about three years ago, was concerned in writing the Critical Review; but we can assure Mr. Murphy it teas no mistake of a Greek professor, nor in any shape chargeable on Mr. Franklin, who never saw the article until the number was published. It was the mistake of a person who, though no professor, is not therefore entirely ignorant of the Greek language in general, nor unacquainted with the writings of Pindar, to which the expression alluded, as any candid ADDITIONAL NOTES. 5 13 reader must acknowledge on the perusal of that very article," &c. See Critical Review, vol. x. p. 320. Page 153. (Parnell is the dunghill.) " The Posthumous Works of Dr. Thomas Parnell, late Archdeacon of Gogher,"* &c. 8vo. 1756. " The public will we hope pay more regard to the memory of Dr. Parnell than to suppose him author of the poems attributed to him by the nameless editor of this collection. * * * The posthumous works before us seem rather to resemble the wild and nonsensical hymns of a mad Moravian, than the remains of so excellent a writer as the late Dr. Parnell." See Critical Review, vol. vi. p. 119. But Mr. P. Cunningham, in his late edition of Johnson's Lives of the Poets, says, " They are genuine, though unworthy of his name." See vol. ii. p. 93, note. Page 209. (Dialogue.) " The additional dialogue," says the Critical Reviewer, " serves only to evince that even learn- ing, understanding, independency, and perhaps a virtuous disposition united, are not proof against the suggestions of ambition, or capable to restrain the possessor from servile adulation to power and narrow jealousies of real merit." See vol. ix. p. 467. To take final leave of Dr. Brown; — it appears that his reputation, rapidly gained by the first volume of his Estimate, as rapidly sank after the second volume appeared; and that the severity of his judgment on the degeneracy of the age, was not supported by the consistency of his private character and manners. His opponents treated him as a petit rnaitre, and his Estimate as ajeu d esprit ; and as he was always before the public, in a constant succession of pamphlets, as a political and party writer, the language of criticism became sometimes mingled with that of ridicule and contempt. He was reproached with being a preacher only in the closet; at other times a frequenter of dances, concerts, and mixed assemblies, till each attack increasing in severity, he is told at length — 544 ADDITIONAL NOTES. " I should do what perhaps your diocesan never will — confine you to your parish, forbid you white gloves and grey powder, and compel you to read the service constantly, but your curate should preach ! " In surveying what has been directly or more casually con- nected with the various features of Dr. Brown's character, and the disadvantages under which it has been exhibited chiefly by his own indiscretions, we must not refuse to ac- knowledge his claim to talents, which enabled him to appear in various walks of literature with success, and to maintain, through severe and lengthened struggles, his reputation as a writer. He had the character of a scholar, and was competently acquainted with the ancient languages. He appeared before the world at once as critic, poet, and moralist; and he possessed that quality which is necessary to all who aim at popularity, a style of more than ordinary perspicuity, force, and elegance. He first became known, I believe, by his Essay on Shaftesbury's Characteristics (a subject proposed to him by a friend*), and subsequently by that more celebrated Essay which for a while engrossed the attention and captivated the judgment of a large por- tion of the public. Yet cooler reflection, and a more cor- rect view of the picture which he had drawn of the social decline of the country, cast a shade over the truth of his representations; the severity of his remarks was found to be without sufficient cause, and received but a faint echo in the general voice. The once-applauded Essay now seemed the work of a writer ambitious to be known, and composed rather for the display of his abilities and the exercise of his in- * This friend was Warburton, to whom Pope had mentioned the mis- chievous tendency of these Essays by Shaftesbury. See on them and on Mr. Brown's Answer, the Correspondence of Mrs. Carter and Miss Talbot, vol. ii. pp. 167, 192. A very different view of the writings of this author is however given by Le Clerc in his Bibliotheque Choisie, torn. xxvi. p. 227. ADDITIONAL NOTES. 545 genuity, than for the discovery of truth, the correction of error, or the enlargement of knowledge. Once being distinguished, the vanity of his mind and the restlessness of his disposition kept him for ever in the press. Error naturally followed haste, and some of his works, as that on " Poetry and Music," betrayed at once the superficialness of his acquaintance with the subject; while in his Estimate, he appears to have mistaken effeminacy and luxury, for what was the natural effect of a growing refinement of manners, an increase of civi- lisation, and a progressive advancement of society. It does not, however, appear that he failed so much from defect of knowledge — for his attainments were certainly various if not profound, and his activity was constant — as for want of those higher qualities of mind which alone give to genius its lustre and to knowledge its usefulness; he failed in consistency of character, in rectitude of judgment, in fidelity of engage- ment, and in patient and prudent habits in his communion with the world. Led away by the natural caprice and levity of his affections, he forfeited at length the patronage of Warburton, and he alienated the friendship of Mason. Still he was looked on with feelings of pity by the former. " I did him hurt," he writes, " by bringing him out into the world, and he rewarded me accordingly." And we are informed on the best authority, that " a suspicious temper betrayed him sometimes into a conduct which looked like unsteadiness and even ingratitude towards his best friends ; but this must be attributed to a latent constitutional disorder that ended so fatally." While, however, Dr. Brown's productions have almost all passed away from public recollection, one is still retained by general consent, and the " Essay on Satire," which was allowed an honourable place by Warburton in his edition of Pope, has not been removed by succeeding pub- lishers. In this poem the thoughts, if not new, are judicious, 5 AG ADDITIONAL NOTES. and are the production of one who could write with correct- ness on an art which he had practised with success. The sentiments are well expressed, and the versification, alike forcible and flowing, was modelled after the example of the great master of rhyme; nor are there occasionally wanting lines of such vigour of thought, fidelity of illustration, and happiness of expression, as to be remembered and quoted at the present day. It is but doing justice to Dr. Brown's poetical genius to say, that Warburton so esteemed it, as to give to him the plan of an epic poem, which Pope had been much intent on, and had left on it the mark almost of his dying hand;* with the desire that he Avould adopt it, with the firm resolution to make it his serious occupation, and, as became the im- portance of the work and the dignity of the writer from whom it came, the diligent and thoughtful work of years. * The subjeet was " Brute,'''' and it is mentioned in a letter from War- burton to Hurd. See Correspondence, p. 36. 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