The Wits and Beaux of Society eBook

Philip Wharton, 1st Duke of Wharton
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 353 pages of information about The Wits and Beaux of Society.

The Wits and Beaux of Society eBook

Philip Wharton, 1st Duke of Wharton
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 353 pages of information about The Wits and Beaux of Society.

  ’Descended from old British sires;
  Great Dodington to kings allied;
  My patron then, my laurels’ pride.

It would be consolatory to find that it is only Welsted who thus profaned the Muse by this abject flattery, were it not recorded that Thomson dedicated to him his ‘Summer.’  The dedication was prompted by Lord Binning; and ‘Summer’ was published in 1727 when Dodington was one of the Lords of the Treasury, as well as Clerk of the Pells in Ireland, It seemed, therefore, worth while for Thomson to pen such a passage as this:—­’Your example sir, has recommended poetry with the greatest grace to the example of those who are engag’d in the most active scenes of life; and this, though confessedly the least considerable of those qualities that dignify your character, must be particularly pleasing to one whose only hope of being introduced to your regard is thro’ the recommendation of an art in which you are a master.’  Warton adding this tribute:—­

  ’To praise a Dodington rash bard! forbear. 
  What can thy weak and ill-tun’d voice avail,
  When on that theme both Young and Thomson fail?’

Yet even when midway in his career, Dodington, in the famous political caricature called ‘The Motion,’ is depicted as ‘the Spaniel,’ sitting between the Duke of Argyle’s legs, whilst his grace is driving a coach at full speed to the Treasury, with a sword instead of a whip in his hand, with Lord Chesterfield as postilion, and Lord Cobham as a footman, holding on by the straps:  even then the servile though pompous character of this true man of the world was comprehended completely; and Bubb Dodington’s characteristics never changed.

In his political life, Dodington was so selfish, obsequious, and versatile as to incur universal opprobrium; he had also another misfortune for a man of society,—­he became fat and lethargic.  ’My brother Ned’ Horace Walpole remarks, ’says he is grown of less consequence, though more weight.’  And on another occasion, speaking of a majority in the House of Lords, he adds, ’I do not count Dodington, who must now always be in the minority, for no majority will accept him.’

Whilst, however, during the factious reign of George II., the town was declared, even by Horace to be wondrous dull; operas unfrequented, plays not in fashion, and amours old as marriages.  Bubb Dodington, with his wealth and profusion, contrived always to be in vogue as a host, while he was at a discount as a politician.  Politics and literature are the highroads in England to that much-craved-for distinction, an admittance into the great world; and Dodington united these passports in his own person:  he was a poetaster, and wrote political pamphlets.  The latter were published and admired:  the poems were referred to as ’very pretty love verses,’ by Lord Lyttelton, and were never published—­and never ought to have been published, it is stated.

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The Wits and Beaux of Society from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.