Page:Life of William Shelburne (vol 1).djvu/57

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1737-1757
AUTOBIOGRAPHY
31

He went up to him, made a very gracious bow, and the man served him to the day of his death.

"He died at Bath, previous to which he was delirious, and imagined himself in the other world, where, meeting an old Clerk of the House of Commons, he gave him an account of all that had happened in the interval between their deaths, with infinite wit, accuracy, and humour, insomuch that it was a pity it was not taken down. The worst check he met with in his political career was the death of Lord Sunderland, to whom he had entirely devoted himself.[1] The next was the death of Mr. Craggs.[2] His death left Sir Robert Walpole master of the field, at least for some years. If their deaths had not taken place there is no saying what might have happened. Lord Sunderland always had the Court and the Germans with him. The Craggs, father and son, were remarkable men. Old Mr. Craggs used to say it was as rare to meet with men perfectly wicked as to meet with men perfectly honest or perfectly able, but that he was one. Once when he was entrusted with Lord Sunderland's interests while the latter attended the King to Hanover, Walpole and his party got hold of some story very much against Lord Sunderland, which it was impossible to counteract by any common means. Old Craggs sent to Sir Robert Walpole to see him and acknowledged the fact, but told him if the least use was attempted to be made of it, he would that moment go before the Lord Mayor and swear that he, Walpole, had a conversation with the Pretender. Walpole said it was a gross falsehood. Craggs said that might be, but he would swear it, and accompany it with such circumstances as would make it believed, and that Walpole knew he was able and capable of it. And it had the effect: the matter dropped. His son had been ill-educated, but applied himself with wonderful diligence after he came of age to repair his want of education, and employed different

  1. In 1722.
  2. In 1721. His father took poison in the same year a few weeks later. Lord Carteret, in consequence of want of support, had to resign the Secretaryship of State in 1724. He then accepted the Lord-Lieutenancy of Ireland, which he held till 1731, but without possessing any influence on the course of English politics.