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March 8, 1669.-I had walked to the New Exchange and there met Mr Moore.

April 7, 1669.-I to the New Exchange to talk with Betty, my little sempstress.

HANNAH MORE AND GARRICK'S FUNERAL

ADELPHI, Feb. 2, 1779.

We (Miss Cadogan and myself) went to Charing Cross to see the melancholy procession. Just as we got there, we received a ticket from the Bishop of Rochester, to admit us into the Abbey. No admittance could be obtained but under his hand. We hurried away in a hackney coach, dreading to be too late. The bell of St Martin's and the Abbey gave a sound that smote upon my very soul. When we got to the cloisters, we found multitudes striving for admittance. We gave our ticket, and were let in, but unluckily we ought to have kept it. We followed the man, who unlocked a door of iron, and directly closed it upon us and two or three others, and we found ourselves in a tower, with a dark winding staircase, consisting of half a hundred stone steps. When we got to the top there was no way out; we ran down again, called, and beat the door till the whole pile resounded with our cries. Here we staid half an hour in perfect agony; we were sure it would be all over: nay, we might never be let out; we might starve; we might perish. At length our clamours brought an honest man—a guardian angel, I then thought him. We implored him to take care of us, and get us into a part of the Abbey whence we might see the grave. He asked for the Bishop's ticket, we had given it away to the wrong person, and he was not obliged to believe we ever had one: yet he saw so much truth in our grief, that though we were most shabby, and a hundred fine people were soliciting the same favour, he took us under each arm-carried us safely through the crowd,

GARRICK'S FUNERAL

and put us in a little gallery directly over the grave, where we could see and hear everything as distinctly as if the Abbey had been a parlour. Little things sometimes affect the mind strongly! We were no sooner recovered from the fresh burst of grief than I cast my eyes, the first thing, on Handel's monument and read the scroll in his hand, "I know that my Redeemer liveth." Just at three the great doors burst open with a noise that shook the roof; the organ struck up, and the whole choir advanced to the grave, in hoods and surplices, singing all the way: then Sheridan, as chief mourner; then the body (alas! whose body), with ten noblemen and gentlemen, pall-bearers; hardly a dry eye-the very players, bred to the trade of counterfeiting, shed genuine tears.

As soon as the body was let down, the bishop began the service, which he read in a low, but solemn and devout manner. Such an awful stillness reigned, that every word was audible. How I felt it! Judge if my heart did not assent to the wish that the soul of our dear brother now departed was in peace. And this is all of Garrick! Yet a very little while, and he shall say to the worm, "Thou art my brother"; and to corruption, "Thou art my mother and my sister." So passes away the fashion of this world. And the very night he was buried, the playhouses were as full, and the Pantheon was as crowded, as if no such thing had happened: nay, the very mourners of the day partook of the revelries of the night-the same night too!

As soon as the crowd was dispersed, our friend came to us with an invitation from the bishop's lady, to whom he had related our disaster, to come into the deanery. We were carried into her dressing-room, but being incapable of speech, she very kindly said she would not interrupt such sorrow, and left us; but sent up wine, cakes, and all manner of good things, which was really well-timed. I caught no cold, notwithstanding all I went through.

Index

Absalom and Achitophel, 227, 255.
Adam, the brothers, call them-
selves" Adelphi," 3; obtain a
lease of the Durham House
property, 75-76; they effect a
marvellous transformation, 76-
79; opposed by the City, they
obtain an Act of Parliament
for embanking the river, 79;
interesting letter on the sub-
ject, 79-84; Granville Sharp's
strictures, 84; the brothers in
financial difficulties, 85; they
obtain another Act of Parlia-
ment, 85; the Adelphi Lot-
tery, 86-90; history of the
brothers, 90-98; Robert
Adam, 90-97; James Adam,
97-98; John Adam, 98;
William Adam, 98.
Adam, the brothers, call them-
selves "Adelphi," 3.
Adam, James, 90, 92, 97.

Adam, John, 98.

Adam, Robert, 90–97.

Adam, William, 98.

Adam, William (father of the
brothers), 91.
Addison, Joseph, 30.
Adelphi, origin of the name, 3 ;

the brothers Adam obtain the
lease of the property, 75-76;
transformation of the property,
76-79; fruitless opposition of

the City, 79-84; the Adelphi
Lottery, 86-90; Scots work-
men succeeded by Irish, 98.
Adelphi Chapel, the, 211-212.
Adelphi Hotel (Osborn's), 180-
181, 183-185.

Adelphi Arches, 187–191.
Aggas' Map of London, 8.
Aickin (actor), 148.
Akenside, Mark, 269.
Albans, Duchess of (Harriot
Mellon), 200, 202-204, 213-
214.

Albans, Duke of, 75-76, 202.
Albemarle, Duchess of ("Nan"
Clarges), 63-71.

Albemarle, Duke of, 255.
Albert, Prince Consort, 118.
Aldborough, Lord, 103.
Alexandra, Queen, 212.
Armstrong, Dr, 210, 212.
Arts, Society of, in the Adelphi,
100-122; description of the
paintings in, 108-118.
Ashburton, Baron, 147.

Atheist, the, or the Soldier's
Fortune, 29.

Aubrey, the antiquary, 17, 220.
Avenue Theatre, 272.

Bacon, Francis, 219–221.
Baddeley, Robert, 148.
Ballade upon a Wedding, 253–

254.

Bannister, John, 174.
Baron-Wilson, Mrs, 208.
Barré, Isaac, 147.

Barrington, Lord, 181.

Barry, James, 101-118.

224.

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Bassompiere, François de, 223- Buckingham Street, 241-247.

Bathurst, Lady, 159.

Batteville, Baron de, 229.
Beaconsfield, Earl of, 181.

Beauclerk, Lady Diana, 153,
155.

Beauclerk, Topham, 150-153,

158.

Becket, Andrew, 169–171.
Beggar's Opera, The, 247.

Bek, Anthony, Bishop of Dur-
ham, 3-4.

Bek, Anthony, the second, 3-4.
Bek, Walter, Bishop of Lin-
coln, 4.

Belty, G. F., 167.
Bensley, W., 148.

Blanchard, E. L., 216-217.
Blanchard, William, 216.
Boleyn, Anne, 11-12.

Boleyn, Thomas, Earl of Wilt-
shire, 11.

Boscawen, Mrs, 154-155.

Boswell, James, 103, 121, 152-
160.

Boyle, Roger, 253.
Brackley, Viscount, 19.
Brandon, Charles, 219.
Brereton, Owen S., 111.
Brereton, William, 148.
Brett, Sir Robert, 251.
Brisden, John, 41.

Burdett, Sir Francis, 201.
Burdett-Coutts, the Baroness,

201, 202, 214.
Burghley, Lord, 221.
Burke, Edmund, 147.
Burney, Dr, 154.

Bury, Richard de, author of
Philobiblon, 9.
Bute, Lord, 212.

Cademan, Will, 29.
Caledonian Hotel, 214.
Camden, Lord, 147.
Campbell, John, 193–194.
Campbell, Lord Frederick, 97.
Campbell & Coutts, 197.
Carew, Sir George, 12.
Carmarthen, Lord, 243.

Carter, Mrs Elizabeth, 154, 156,
162.

Cavendish, Henry, 255.
Cawarden, Sir Thomas, 251.
Chamberlayne, 157.

Charles the First, 223–224.
Charles II., 38.

Chastillon, de, French Am-
bassador, 14.

Chinese wall-paper in the Strand,

210-211.

Christmas, Gerrard, 251.

Cibber, Mrs, 248.

Clarendon, Lord, 254-255.

Britain's Burse (the New Ex- Clarges,

change, which see).

Broghill, Lord, 253.

Brook Street, Grosvenor Square,
supplied with water from the
Adelphi, 240.

Buccleuch, Duke of, 97.

Clarges, "Nan," Duchess of
Albemarle, 63–71.

Clarke, John S., 272.

Clemens, Samuel L., 215.

Clinton, Lord, 12.
Clouston, R. S., 92-94.

Coal Meter's Office, 38.

Colman, George, the elder, 147, | Disraeli, Benjamin, 181.

174.
Commissioners

D'Israeli, Isaac, 181, 224.
Accounts, Dodd, James, 147.
Dowgate, 234.

of

office of, 36.

Conscious Lovers, The, 247.

Constable, John, 242.
Constitutional Club, 269.
Cosmo, the Grand Duke, 27.
Country Wife, The, 30.

Coutts, the house of, 192-214.
Coutts, James, 196-197.
Coutts, John, 195-196.
Coutts, Patrick, 195-196.
Coutts, Thomas, 196–213.
Coutts, William, 195.
Covent Garden Theatre, 57,
126, 137, 159, 270.
Coventry, Earl of, 97.
Coventry, Lord Keeper, 36.
Cows in the Adelphi, 189.
Crabbe, George, 181.
Cranmer, Thomas, 11-12.
Craven Street, 269-272.
Creed, John, 39.

Cricket, The, 187.

Crofts, Dean of Norwich, 39.
Cromwell, Oliver, 48, 228-229.
Cromwell, Lord, 12.
Cromwell, Richard, 12.
Cunningham, Peter, 76.

Daily Telegraph, The, 217.
Danes, St Clement, 162.
David Copperfield, scenes from,
in the Adelphi, 184, 246-
247.

Davies, Thomas, 41.
Delany, Mrs, 166.
Devonshire, Duke of, 147.
Dickens, Charles, frequents the
Adelphi when a boy, 182-
183; scenes from David
Copperfield, 184, 246-247;
from Pickwick, 184-185;
banks with Coutts & Co., 212.

Drury Lane Theatre, 124-126,

164, 247.

Drury Lane Fund, 124.

Dryden, John, 29, 30, 40, 227.
Dudley, Duke of Northumber-
land, 14-15.

Dudley, Lady Catherine, 15.
Dudley, Lord Guildford, 15.
Dudley, Sir John, 12.
Duffet, Thomas, 27.

Dundonald, Earl of, 200–201.
Durham House, its origin in
the thirteenth century, 3-4 ;
Otho, the papal legate, the
Oxford clergy and scholars
make "solemn submission"
to him here, 4-5; Henry III.
shelters here, 6; Prince
(Henry V.) stays here, 6;
Richard de Bury, author of
Philobiblon, lives here, 8; Hat-
field, Thomas, Bishop of Dur-
ham, 7, 9; Henry VIII. appro-
priates the house, 10; grants
it to Thomas Boleyn, 11; Anne
Boleyn and Princess Elizabeth,
11; Cranmer resides here, 11;
great festivities attended
by Henry VIII. and Anne
Boleyn, the Court, the Mayor
of London, etc., 12-13; Chas-
tillon, the French Ambassador
to Edward VI., lodges here,
14; Edward VI. grants the
house to the Princess Eliza-
beth, 14; a mint here, 14;
Lady Jane Grey married here,
15; Queen Elizabeth acquires
the house, 14; grants it to
Walter Raleigh, 15; Raleigh's
residence here, 16-20; Philip

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