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My pen, you see, can walk a little better that is all I can boast of. Yr bathing, I hope, will be more prosperous. Strawberry-hill, Aug. I have just received such a long letter from you of the 6th that if I attempted to answer it with my own hand I should be. Besides, tho I like to hear so much from you, I am very averse to your writing much, especially when you are bathing, which I am delighted to hear is of service to you. I like your drawing too, tho not just now, as it adds to your being sedentary.

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I have another strong reason against your writing more than short notes to me ; it would curtail your frequent letters to poor dear Agnes, which make her so very happy. I will reply as briefly as I can to some other points of your letter. I am grieved that my dear Duchess has any additional pains.

When I saw Halnaker House there was a new red-brick apartment that had been run up by the last Earl of Derby that possessed it, but I suppose the D.

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I am glad you have no worse new neighbours than the Pepys s, tho , as you and your companion are both so erudite, I shall not wonder if he brings some of his clan to educate under your eyes. You may be assured that Lady I. Lisle is commissioned to search for a villa for her mistress, which she has not yet found. The Countess drives about in a plain coach without arms. The Pss. The bon-mot in the Times was certainly not mine, but perhaps was borrowed from a very ancient one : when Lord Cowper got himself made a titular prince of the empire, he wrote to England to know what place he was to take ; I said I could tell him exactly between Prince Boothby and Count Ellis.

I have little faith in an invasion at present ; the unparalleled spirit, activity, and cleverness of our seamen will not tempt the French sailors much to embark ; they may attempt to run in a few vessels here and there into open coasts of the three kingdoms, and they do give out that they will try one more campaign against us, corps a corps. Have you heard of single-speech Hamilton s mad will?

He bequeathed the landed estate to Lord Egremont, and ten thousand pounds to the young Lady Spencer, and then said he was. The Duchess of Devonshire has been in great danger of losing her sight, by catching cold very indiscreetly. They have saved her eyes by almost strangling her with a handkerchief, and forcing all the blood up into her head, and then bleeding her with leeches.

This is all I have to tell you but a few words on myself. I take the air every morning in my coach, and sit an hour out upon the lawn, and crawl a little about between two servants, and do think I have gained a grain of strength ; nay, last night I took courage and was carried up into Lady Mendip s room, and even played two rubbers at cribbage. I found nobody there but the tribe of Agar for I had informed myself and Mr.


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Williams, and the General and Lady Cecilia. Most of the neighbourhood is dispersed; the House of Orange which is nothing to me are gone to Nuneham, Oxford, and Blenheim ; the Murrays to make a visit somewhere for a fortnight ; the Mackinzys to Brighton ; and the Darrells to Cheltenham, as usual.

Lady Mount brought Madame de Cambis here t other morning ; the young Mounts are upon their mountain. The letters of August 16th and 24th, already published, complete those addressed to the Miss Berrys during this journey. The next which has been preserved is in December, without date of day, written in Kirgate s hand, and addressed to Miss Berry at Cliveden Little Strawberry Hill. Berkeley Square, Wednesday morning, Dec.

Tho I thank you for letting me hear so often, your last night s letter by the penny post was most uncomfortable. You had not grown better, as I hoped and expected. The weather is grown so much softer to-day that I trust you will recover faster, but pray take notice and remember that you are too delicate to run any risks. My horses shall certainly be wirh you on Friday night. I have seen nobody yet to-day. Last night I had Mrs. Nicol, and Cosway, whose glibity was. He told us that the late Duke of Orleans had told him that his object was to make his son, the Duke de Chartres, king ; and he said that Monsieur de Vergennes, the day after signing the commercial treaty with us, had said to him still to him, Cosway that he Vergennes must have been drunk when he signed a treaty so favourable to England such blabs were the French!

My kin have at last had a letter from their son, George Churchill, in Jamaica, who is perfectly well, and who even does not mention having been otherwise, whence they conclude some previous letter must have miscarried. Adieu, unless I hear anything before the post goes out. This last, dated December 15th, and already published, closes the correspondence with Miss Berry.

It begins : [I had no account of you at all yesterday but in Mrs. Darner s letter ; nor have I had any before post to-day as you promised me in hers.

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I would answer it, but I am grown a dull old Tabby, and have no quips, and cranks, and wanton wiles left] An extract of a letter from Miss Berry to an intimate friend, shows the state of her mind at the close of this sad year. You will, I know, wish me to say something of myself. It shall be little, for who can talk of suffering to you, or dwell upon disappointments when they think of yours? I shall not dwell on the effect which you will easily guess all this must have had on a heart as warm and as little generally confiding as mine, but a heart which when once it trusts, trusts so implicitly.

My consolations have been in the increased and touching affection of my sister, the kind, rational, and unremitting attentions of Mrs. Darner, and the reflection that there is no part of my conduct that I could for a moment have wished otherwise. These have succeeded in restoring me to the power of employing myself and my spirits to near their usual level.

It appears that some of Miss Berry s friends sought to alleviate her distress, and lessen her regrets at the unfortunate termination of her engagement, by endeavouring to blame and depreciate the object of her affections ; but, with her, disappointment did not find comfort in resentment, and she generously defended from censure or detraction the conduct and character of one who had been to her the cause of bitter suffering. Extract of a letter to a friend :. Needed you any intimation that my affections must have been deeply engaged before I resolved, or even thought of marrying?

Had I ever chosen to think of making what is called a prudent marriage, did you suppose, that I, in common with all my sex, might not have done it? Or could you suppose this a prudent marriage? Did my silence on this subject deceive you? Now that he no longer stands in that position, it is not my having reason to complain of him that shall prevent my doing him justice. I know not where you have taken your reports of his character VOL.

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I have heard 0. Instead of not knowing any real virtues he possesses, until this unfortunate affair, in which I am still convinced his head and not his heart is to blame, I know nobody whose character united so many manly virtues. I still believe that had this separation never taken place, I should never have had to complain of him, nor he to doubt me. Albans, and to Brooke Hall to meet Mrs.

30/08/1863

Lord Orford dies. See much of the Starembergs. As his correspondents, soon after his removal, were likewise established in London, no more letters passed between them. When not immediately suffering from pain, his mind was tranquil and cheerful. He was still capable of being amused, and of taking some part in conversation ; but during the last weeks of his life, when fever was superadded to his other ills, his mind became subject to the cruel hallucination of supposing himself neglected and abandoned by the only persons to whom his memory clung, and whom he always desired to see.

In vain they recalled to his recollection how recently they had left him, and how short had been their absence ; it satisfied him for the moment, but the same idea recurred as soon as he had lost sight of them.


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  • At last nature, sinking under the exhaustion of weakness, obliterated all ideas but those of mere existence, which ended without a struggle, on the 2nd of March, It has been often a matter of speculation whether Lord Orford s great attachment to Miss Berry had ever led to any explicit declaration of a wish to obtain her consent to their union in marriage. Notwithstanding the frequent professions of equal attachment to both sisters, it is easy to see throughout the correspondence that Miss Berry herself was his first object.

    The dread of being thought ridiculous by playing the part of a more than septuagenarian lover, no doubt acted as a constant check upon the indulgence of such hopes as he might have reasonably entertained as a younger man ; and so entirely dependent was he on the society of Miss Berry and her sister for what remained to him of pleasure in life, that even if impelled by the wish to secure to himself the absolute right to her companionship and attentions as a wife, he probably feared to lose her friendship by proffering the hand she might not accept ; yet, it was admitted by those best entitled to know, that at one time Miss Berry was conscious that the choice was within her power ; but she clung to his friendship too warmly and too sincerely, not to sedulously guard him from the expression of any feeling she could not fully return.

    She accepted his friendly affection without reserve.

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    He was spared the mortification of ever learning from her lips that more he could never expect. The letter of the 15th December was, according to Miss Berry s account, the last received by her, or her sister, from Lord Orford. It was the close. Berry and his daughters, with directions that Mr. Berry should undertake the care of a new edition of his works, with the addition of all the papers contained in that box. Miss Berry acknowledges, in a letter addressed to a friend at this time, that in making her father his editor and Mrs.

    Darner his executrix, Lord Orford caused his papers being secured to her eye and mine, and made me his editor without the necessary publicity attached to the name. Miss Berry describes herself in the same letter as labouring with incessant perseverance for nearly a twelvemonth ; as neglecting all her own pursuits ; never looking in a book but that was conducive in some degree to the work she had in hand ; reading and rereading with perfect integrity of intention, both with respect to the author and the public ; and she adds that she is making all that part of the publication which depends on her selection as worthy of it as possible.

    Messuage and outhouses, late in the occupation of Mrs.