FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   45   46   47   48   49   50   51   52   53   54   55   56   >>  
as about you; and I can assure you that the manner in which the king spoke of you, could not afford you so much pleasure as I myself felt upon the occasion. You know very well, that he has long since offered you his good offices with the King of France; and for my own part," continued he, smiling, "you know very well that I would solicit him so to do, if it was not through fear of losing you as soon as your peace is made; but, thanks to Miss Hamilton, you are in no great haste: however, I am ordered by the king, my master, to acquaint you, that while you remain here, until you are restored to the favour of your sovereign, he presents you with a pension of fifteen hundred Jacobus's: it is indeed a trifle, considering the figure the Chevalier de Grammont makes among us; but it will assist him," said he, embracing him, "to give us sometimes a supper." The Chevalier de Grammont received, as he ought, the offer of a favour he did not think proper to accept: "I acknowledge," said he, "the king's bounty in this proposal, but I am still more sensible of Lord Falmouth's generosity in it; and I request him to assure his Majesty of my perfect gratitude: the king, my master, will not suffer me to want, when he thinks fit to recall me; and while I continue here, I will let you see that I have wherewithal to give my English friends now and then a supper." At these words, he called for his strong box, and showed him seven or eight thousand guineas in solid gold. Lord Falmouth, willing to improve to the Chevalier's advantage the refusal of so advantageous an offer, gave Monsieur de Comminge, then ambassador at the English court, an account of it; nor did Monsieur de Comminge fail to represent properly the merit of such a refusal to the French court. Hyde Park, every one knows, is the promenade of London! nothing was so much in fashion, during the fine weather, as that promenade, which was the rendezvous of magnificence and beauty: every one, therefore, who had either sparkling eyes, or a splendid equipage, constantly repaired thither; and the king seemed pleased with the place. Coaches with glasses were then a late invention. [Coaches were first introduced into England in the year 1564. Taylor, the water poet, (Works, 1630, p. 240,) says,--"One William Boonen, a Dutchman, brought first the use of coaches hither; and the said Boonen was Queen Elizabeth's coachman; for, indeed, a coach was a strange monster in th
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   45   46   47   48   49   50   51   52   53   54   55   56   >>  



Top keywords:
Chevalier
 

Coaches

 

favour

 

promenade

 

Grammont

 

master

 
supper
 
Comminge
 
assure
 

English


refusal

 

Boonen

 

Monsieur

 
Falmouth
 

thousand

 

called

 

guineas

 

strong

 

London

 

showed


account

 

improve

 

properly

 

represent

 
advantage
 

advantageous

 

French

 

ambassador

 
splendid
 

England


Taylor

 

William

 
Dutchman
 

coachman

 
strange
 

monster

 

Elizabeth

 

brought

 
coaches
 

introduced


beauty
 
magnificence
 

rendezvous

 

fashion

 

weather

 

sparkling

 
pleased
 

glasses

 

invention

 

thither