Page:The Story of Nell Gwyn.djvu/137

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NELLY'S SMART REPLY.
121

To such a height did this feeling run that Misson was assured hawkers had been heard to cry a printed sheet, advising the King to part with the Duchess of Portsmouth, or to expect most dreadful consequences.[1] While a still stronger illustration of what the people thought of the Duchess is contained in the reply of her brother-in-law, the Earl of Pembroke, of whom the Duchess had threatened to complain to the King. The Earl told her that if she did he would set her upon her head at Charing Cross, and show the nation its grievance.[2]

A feeling of antipathy between Protestants and Roman Catholics was at this time exciting the people to many ridiculous pageants and expressions of ill-will to those about the Court suspected of anti-Protestant principles. A True Blue Protestant poet was a name of honour, and a Protestant sock a favourite article of apparel.[3] When Nelly was insulted in her coach at Oxford by the mob, who mistook her for the Duchess of Portsmouth, she looked out of the window and said, with her usual good humour, "Pray, good people, be civil; I am the Protestant ———." This laconic speech drew

  1. Misson's Memoirs, 8vo. 1719, p. 204.
  2. Walpole's Anecdotes of Painting, ed. Wornum, p. 464.
  3. Shadwell was called the True Blue Protestant poet; for the Protestant sock, see Scott's Dryden.