my apologies, to which I shall beg leave to add how very
sincerely I have the honour to be, my dear sir,
`Your most
obedienthumble servant,
`DEBBY.
This is the very model of a dun, and proves how handsomely
such ugly things can be done when one has to deal with a noble
instead of a
plebeian creditor.
But Selwyn had not only to
endure such indignities, but also to
inflict them, as appears by the following letter to him from the
Honourable General Fitzpatrick, in answer to a dun, which, we are
assured, was `gentle and moderate.'
`I am very sorry to hear the night ended so ill; but to give you
some idea of the utter
impossibility of my being useful on the
occasion, I will inform you of the state of my affairs. I won
L400 last night, which was immediately appropriated by Mr
_Martindale_, to whom I still owe L300, and I am in Brookes'
book for
thrice that sum. Add to all this, that at Christmas I
expect an inundation of
clamorous creditors, who, unless I
somehow or other
scrape together some money to satisfy them, will
overwhelm me entirely. What can be done? If I could coin my
heart, or drop my blood into drachms, I would do it, though by
this time I should probably have neither heart nor blood left. I
am afraid. you will find Stephen in the same state of
insolvency. Adieu! I am obliged to you for the
gentleness and
moderation of your dun,
considering how long I have been your
debtor.
`Yours most sincerely,
`R. F.'[119]
[119] Apud _Selwyn and his Contemporaries_ by Jesse.
Selwyn is said to have been a loser on the whole, and often
pillaged. Latterly he appears to have got the better of his
propensity for play, if we may judge from the following wise
sentiment:--`It was too great a consumer,' he said, `of four
things--time, health, fortune, and thinking.' But a
writer in
the _Edinburgh Review_ seems to doubt Selwyn's reformation; for
his initiation of Wilberforce occurred in 1782, when he was 63;
and
previously" target="_blank" title="ad.预先;以前">
previously, in 1776, he underwent the process of dunning from
Lord Derby, before-mentioned, and in 1779 from Mr Crawford (`Fish
Crawford,' as he was called), each of whom, like Mr Shafto, `had
a sum to make up'--in the
infernal style so
horridly provoking,
even when we are able and
willing to pay. However, as Selwyn
died
comparatively" target="_blank" title="ad.比较地;比较上">
comparatively rich, it may be presumed that his fortune
suffered to no great
extent by his
indulgence in the vice of
gaming.
The following are some of George Selwyn's jokes relating to
gambling:--
One night, at White's, observing the Postmaster-General, Sir
Everard Fawkener, losing a large sum of money at Piquet, Selwyn,
pointing to the successful
player, remarked--`See now, he is
robbing the _MAIL!_'
On another occasion, in 1756, observing Mr Ponsonby, the Speaker
of the Irish House of Commons, tossing about bank-bills at a
Hazard table at Newmarket--`Look,' he said, `how easily the
Speaker passes the money-bills!'
A few months afterwards (when the public journals were daily
containing an
account of some fresh town which had conferred the
freedom of its
corporation in a gold box on Mr Pitt, afterwards
Earl of Chatham, and the Right Honourable Henry Bilson Legge, his
fellow-patriot and colleague), Selwyn, who neither admired their
politics nor respected their principles, proposed to the old and
new club at Arthur's, that he should be deputed to present to
them the freedom of each club in a _dice-box_.
On one of the waiters at Arthur's club having been committed
to prison for a felony--`What a
horrid idea,' said Selwyn, `he
will give of us to the people in Newgate!'
When the affairs of Charles Fox were in a more than usually
embarrassed state,
chiefly through his gambling, his friends
raised a
subscription among themselves for his
relief. One of
them remarking that it would require some
delicacy in breaking
the matter to him, and adding that `he wondered how Fox would
take it.' `Take it?' interrupted Selwyn, `why, _QUARTERLY_, to
be sure.'[120]
[120] Jesse, _George Selwyn and his Contemporaries._
LORD CARLISLE.
This
eminentstatesman was regarded by his contemporaries as an
able, an
influential, and
occasionally a powerful speaker.
Though married to a lady for whom in his letters he ever
expresses the warmest feelings of
admiration and
esteem; and
surrounded by a young and increasing family, who were evidently
the objects of his deepest
affection, Lord Carlisle,
nevertheless, at times appears to have been
unable to extricate
himself from the dangerous enticements to play to which he
was exposed. His fatal
passion for play--the source of
adventitious
excitement at night, and of deep
distress in the
morning--seems to have led to
frequent and
inconvenient losses,
and
eventually to have plunged him into
comparativedistress.
`In recording these failings of a man of
otherwise strong sense,
of a high sense of honour, and of kindly
affections, we have said
the worst that can be adduced to his
disadvantage. Attached,
indeed, as Lord Carlisle may have been to the pleasures of
society, and
unfortunate as may have been his
passion for the
gaming table, it is difficult to peruse those passages in his
letters in which he deeply reproaches himself for yielding to the
fatal
fascination of play, and accuses himself of having
diminished the
inheritance of his children, without a feeling of
commiseration for the sensations of a man of strong sense and
deep feeling, while reflecting on his moral
degradation. It is
sufficient, however, to observe of Lord Carlisle, that the deep
sense which he entertained of his own folly; the almost maddening
moments to which he refers in his letters of self-condemnation
and bitter regret; and
subsequently his noble
victory over the
siren enticements of pleasure, and his
thorough emancipation
from the trammels of a domineering
passion, make
adequate amends
for his
previousunhappy career.'[121]
[121] Jesse, _George Selwyn and his Contemporaries_, ii.
Brave conquerors, for so ye are,
Who war against your own
affections,
And the huge army of the world's desires.
Lady Sarah Bunbury,
writing to George Selwyn, in 1767, says:--`If
you are now at Paris with poor C. [evidently Carlisle], who I
dare say is now swearing at the French people, give my
compliments to him. I call him poor C. because I hope he is
only
miserable at having been such a _PIGEON_ to Colonel Scott.
I never can pity him for losing at play, and I think of it as
little as I can, because I cannot bear to be obliged to abate the
least of the good opinion I have always had of him.'
Oddly enough the
writer had no better
account to give of her own
husband; she says, in the letter:--`Sir Charles games from
morning till night, but he has never yet lost L100 in one
day.'[122]
[122] This Lady Sarah Bunbury was the wife of Sir Charles
Bunbury, after having had a chance of being Queen of England, as
the wife of George III., who was
passionately in love with her,
and would have married her had it not been for the constitutional
opposition of his privy council. This
charming and beautiful
woman died in 1826, at the age of 82. She was probably the last
surviving great-granddaughter of Charles II.--Jesse, _Ubi supra_.
About the year 1776 Lord Carlisle wrote the following letter
to George Selwyn:--
`MY DEAR GEORGE,
`I have
undone myself, and it is to no purpose to conceal
from you my
abominablemadness and folly, though perhaps the
particulars may not be known to the rest of the world. I never
lost so much in five times as I have done to-night, and am in