Notes and Queries, Number 27, May 4, 1850 by Various
page 11 of 92 (11%)
page 11 of 92 (11%)
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without surviving issue, the estates passed to a distant branch of her
family. About ten years ago I made a careful search (by permission) at Hanbury Hall for the supposed Monmouth MSS., but found none; and I ascertained by inquiry that there were none at Enstone Hall, the seat of Mr. Phillips's second wife and widow. The MSS. might have been carried to Burleigh, and a friend obtained for me a promise from the Marquis of Exeter that search should be made for them there, but I have reason to believe that the matter was forgotten. Perhaps some of your correspondents may have the means of ascertaining whether there are such MSS. in Lord Exeter's library. I confess my doubt whether so cautious a man as Thomas Vernon would have retained in his possession a mass of correspondence that might have been fraught with danger to himself personally; and, had it been in the Burleigh library, whether it could have escaped notice. This, however, is to be noted. After Vernon's death there was a dispute whether his MSS. were to pass to his heir-at-law or to his personal representatives, and the court ordered the MSS. (Reports) to be printed. This was done very incorrectly, and Lord Kenyon seems to have hinted that private reasons have been assigned for that, but these could hardly have related to the Monmouth MSS. SCOTUS. * * * * * PARNELL. The following verses by Parnell are not included in any edition of his poems that I have seen. {428} They are printed in Steele's _Miscellany_ (12mo. 1714), p. 63., and in the second edition of the same _Miscellany_ (12mo. 1727), p. 51., with Parnell's name, and, what is more, on both |
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