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Updated: May 24, 2025


The wits maintained that when he kissed hands upon his elevation to the Attorney's place, he went to court in a second-hand suit purchased from Lord Stormont's valet. In the letter attributed to him by a clever writer in the 'Rolliad, he is made to say "My income has been cruelly estimated at seven, or, as some will have it, eight thousand pounds per annum.

Rolle, the hero of The Rolliad, was one of those unlucky persons, whose destiny it is to be immortalized by ridicule, and to whom the world owes the same sort of gratitude for the wit of which they were the butts, as the merchants did, in Sinbad's story, to those pieces of meat to which diamonds adhered. Burke. There were also a few minor contributions from the pens of Bate Dudley, Mr.

Both the Rolliad men and Wolcot had been on the Whig, Wolcot almost on the Republican side; and for some years they had met with no sufficient adversaries, though Gifford soon engaged "Peter" on fairly equal terms. The great revulsion of feeling, however, which the acts of the French Revolution induced among Englishmen generally drew on a signal rally on the Tory part.

Pope, in his Essay on Man, iv. 267, borrows the phrase: 'Painful pre-eminence! yourself to view, Above life's weakness and its comforts too. It is humorously introduced into the Rolliad in the description of the Speaker: 'There Cornewall sits, and oh! unhappy fate! Must sit for ever through the long debate.

He was Lord Shelburne's brother-in-law, at whose house Johnson might have met him, as well as in Fox's company. There are one or two lines in The Rolliad which border on profanity. Charles Fox to the Hon. John Townshend, p. 13, writes: 'Oft shall Fitzpatrick's wit and Stanhope's ease, And Burgoyne's manly sense unite to please. See ante, i. 379, note 2. According to Mr. James.

The Rolliad is the name generally given for shortness to a collection of political satires originating in the great Westminster election of 1784, when Fox was the Whig candidate. It derived its name from a Devonshire squire, Mr.

Coarseness and personality, however, are in the Rolliad refined and high-minded in comparison with the work of "Peter Pindar," which has the redeeming merit of being even funnier, with the defect of being much more voluminous and unequal. John Wolcot was a Devonshire man, born in May 1738 at Kingsbridge, or rather its suburb Dodbrooke, in Devonshire.

It was about this time that, in the course of an altercation with Mr. Rolle, the member for Devonshire, Mr. Sheridan took the opportunity of disavowing any share in the political satires then circulating, under the titles of "The Rolliad" and the "Probationary Odes."

Miscellaneous writer, s. of a West Indian planter, gained some fame by Poetical Tales by Sir Gregory Gander . He also had a hand in the Rolliad, a series of Whig satires which appeared about 1785. Changing sides he afterwards contributed to the Anti-Jacobin. He accompanied Sir J. Harris on his mission to the Netherlands, and there coll. materials for his History of the Dutch Revolution . He ed.

He was one of the Lords of the Treasury. See also The Rolliad, p. 60 Johnson, however, when telling Mrs. Thrale that, in case of her husband's death, she ought to carry on his business, said: 'Do not be frighted; trade could not be managed by those who manage it if it had much difficulty. Their great books are soon understood, and their language,

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