A Memoir of the Reverend Sydney Smith
Letters 1835
Sydney Smith to Lady Grey, 11 September 1835
Combe Florey, Sept. 11th,
1835.
My dear Lady Grey,
Your letter gave me great pleasure—the pleasure of being
cared about by old and good friends, and the pleasure of seeing that they know
I care about them. Lord Grey has met with
that reception which every honest and right-minded man felt to be his due. If I
had never known him, and lived in the north, I should have come out to wave my
bonnet as he passed. He may depend upon it he has played a great part in
English history, and that the best part of the English people entertain for him
the most profound respect. And now, for the rest of life, let him trifle and
lounge, and do everything which may be agreeable to him, and drink as much wine
as he dare, and not be too severe in criticizing himself.
We have had Scarlett
and Denman here: the former, an old friend
of mine; Denman everybody likes.
I don’t know whether you have the same joy, but I am
heartily glad the fine weather is over; it totally prevented me from taking
exercise, and therefore, from being as well as I otherwise should have been.
Lord and Lady John Russell came here on Monday. On the 22nd I go to 25,
Lower Brook-street, and on the 28th we go to Paris for a month,—Mrs. Sydney, and Mr. and Mrs. Hibbert,
and myself. I have not the least wish to see Paris again, but go to show it to
372 | MEMOIR OF THE REV. SYDNEY SMITH. | |
Mrs. Sydney. I think every wife has a right to insist upon
seeing Paris. It would give me some pleasure to talk with the King of France for half an hour.
We all (I take it for granted) rejoice at the wise
decision of the Government. They would have lost character if they had given up
the Bill, and embroiled the country for an object so trifling. O’Connell’s letter to the Duke of Wellington is
dreadfully scurrilous, but there are in it some distressing truths. The state
of America will help the Tories, and diffuse a horror of mobs.
I have (heat excepted) spent an agreeable summer with my
two daughters and all their families,—seven grandchildren. It will give me
great pleasure to hear that Lord Grey and
you have been and are well and happy.
Thomas Denman, first baron Denman (1779-1854)
English barrister and writer for the
Monthly Review; he was MP,
solicitor-general to Queen Caroline (1820), attorney-general (1820), lord chief justice
(1832-1850). Sydney Smith commented, “Denman everybody likes.”
Charles Grey, second earl Grey (1764-1845)
Whig statesman and lover of the Duchess of Devonshire; the second son of the first earl
(d. 1807), he was prime minister (1831-34).
Emily Hibbert [née Smith] (1807-1874)
The younger daughter of Sydney Smith; in 1828 she married Nathaniel Hibbert
(1794-1865).
Nathaniel Hibbert (1794-1865)
Of Munden House, Hertfordshire, the son of West-India merchant George Hibbert
(1757-1837); educated at Winchester, Trinity College, Cambridge, and Lincoln's Inn, he was
a barrister and magistrate. He was the son-in-law of Sidney Smith.
Louis Philippe, king of the French (1773-1850)
The son of Louis Philippe II, Duke of Orléans; he was King of France 1830-48; he
abdicated following the February Revolution of 1848 and fled to England.
Daniel O'Connell (1775-1847)
Irish politician, in 1823 he founded the Catholic Association to press for Catholic
emancipation.
Lady Adelaide Russell [née Lister] (1807-1838)
The daughter of Thomas Henry Lister; she married (1) Thomas Lister, second Baron
Ribblesdale (d. 1832), and (2) in 1835 Lord John Russell; she died in childbirth.
John Russell, first earl Russell (1792-1878)
English statesman, son of John Russell sixth duke of Bedford (1766-1839); he was author
of
Essay on the English Constitution (1821) and
Memoirs of the Affairs of Europe (1824) and was Prime Minister (1865-66).
James Scarlett, first baron Abinger (1769-1844)
English barrister and politician educated at Trinity College, Cambridge and the Inner
Temple; he was a Whig MP (1819-34) who served as attorney-general in the Canning and
Wellington ministries.
Catharine Amelia Smith [née Pybus] (1768-1852)
The daughter of John Pybus, English ambassador to Ceylon; in 1800 she married Sydney
Smith, wit and writer for the
Edinburgh Review.