George Savile, First Marquess of Halifax

1633–1695

Introduction

Halifax's Papers

George Savile, first Marquess of Halifax, eminent statesman and pamphleteer — Dryden's Jotham of piercing wit and pregnant thought — was a prolific writer and correspondent and his papers have survived in considerable numbers. They include autograph drafts, notebooks, memoranda, correspondence and other working documents relating to both his literary and political work, as well as scribal manuscripts directly associated with him. Such papers survive despite some measure of dispersal of the original Halifax Archive.

Halifax's papers evidently passed at his death to his son William (1665-1700), second Marquess of Halifax, who in 1695 married Lady Mary Finch, daughter of Daniel Finch (1647-1730), second Earl of Nottingham and sixth Earl of Winchilsea. After the second Marquess's death in 1700 — upon which the principal family seat at Rufford in Nottinghamshire passed to a cousin of Halifax's, Sir John Savile, sixth Baronet (1651-1704) — his widow preserved the main archive at Halifax House in St James's Square, London, until her own death in 1718. The papers were retained by her elder daughter, Lady Dorothy Savile (1699-1758), Countess of Burlington, until the house was sold in 1720. Lord Nottingham advised her at that time about the archives, saying that Lord Finch (1689-1769), third Earl of Nottingham &c., would take care to search every ye least hole or corner and to bring away every scrip wthout looking into ym so that she might afterwards upon perusal of ym judge what are fitt to be kept and wt to be burnt (British Library, Add. MS 28569, f. 154r; quoted in Foxcroft, I, viii). Whether any manuscripts were actually burnt at that time is not known. Besides manuscripts that can be accounted for, Lady Burlington certainly retained the original manuscripts, now lost, of Halifax's celebrated Character of King Charles the Second and of his Political, Moral, and Miscellaneous Thoughts and Reflections, which were published in 1750 (Foxcroft, II, 343-60, 489-528). Unconfirmed, and perhaps suspect, is an allegation by Lord Oxford (reported by Edmond Malone and cited in Foxcroft, I, viii) that she destroyed a copy of Halifax's Journal or Memoirs at the instigation of Alexander Pope, who thought them too critical of Roman Catholicism. The majority of the Halifax papers which Lady Burlington acquired clearly passed in due course to her daughter, Charlotte Boyle, who in 1748 married William Cavendish (1720-64), fourth Duke of Devonshire.

This brief history largely accounts for the main existing collections of Halifax's papers. Most important is the collection which passed into the muniments of the Finch family, now preserved in the Leicestershire Record Office (DG 7). These papers — which were unknown to Foxcroft but which have been investigated by more recent scholars — include autograph drafts of one familiar work by Halifax (*HaG 44-45), besides a considerable quantity of unpublished drafts, papers and commonplace books by him (*HaG 60, *HaG 69-71).

A second notable collection — the majority of which was known to Foxcroft — remains among the muniments of the Duke of Devonshire at Chatsworth House in Derbyshire. It includes an important notebook of Halifax's as well as a quantity of miscellaneous autograph drafts, memoranda, correspondence received and other papers belonging to him (*HaG 67-68). The Halifax Collection at Chatsworth has been largely (but not fully) calendared in an HMC Report (1977: NRA No. 77/28). Items not included in the report are to be found at Chatsworth, in the Letters series, and in a box of Halifax and Nottingham letters and legal and estate papers kept in the librarian's cabinet.

A third collection — which, again, was known to Foxcroft — was probably derived from the Devonshire archives later in the eighteenth century. This is the Halifax Papers among the muniments of the Earls Spencer, formerly at Althorp in Northamptonshire and now (since 1984) in the British Library. Although the Spencer family — largely descending from Halifax's brother-in-law and fierce political rival Robert Spencer (1640-1702), second Earl of Sunderland — had some obvious connection with Halifax through his first wife, Dorothy Spencer (d.1670), while his great-great-grandson, the fifth Duke of Devonshire (1748-1811), married in 1774 Georgiana (1757-1806), daughter of John, first Earl Spencer, it seems likely that those Halifax papers now in the Spencer muniments were brought there directly from the Devonshire archives (perhaps while at Devonshire House) by Miss Rachel Lloyd (d.1803). The latter made several volumes of transcripts of Halifax papers, the originals quite possibly borrowed by her and remaining at the time of her death among her papers, which were left to Georgiana, Dowager Countess Spencer. The Spencer Papers today, now in the British Library (Add. MSS 75301-75350), include one notable autograph manuscript of an important journal by him (*HaG 61), various autograph memoranda by him (*HaG 65), and a quantity of correspondence received by him, in addition to Rachel Lloyd's transcripts (HaG 62-63).

A fourth Halifax collection — one unknown to Foxcroft — is owned by the present Lord Savile of Rufford and is preserved at the Nottinghamshire Record Office (DDSR and DDSR addit.). It includes a number of letters received by Halifax from correspondents and various of his legal and official papers, although none of his literary papers. It is presumably what was left behind at Rufford when Lady Halifax moved to London after 1700.

This general tally of Halifax's papers could be extended by an account of manuscripts almost certainly transcribed from his autograph manuscripts by persons known to him (Sir William Trumbull, for instance) and of papers of his, or copies of his tracts, which are still among the archives of notable English families (such as those of the Marquess of Bath, the Earl of Lonsdale and the Harley and Pakington families) who were related to or associated with him.

Of those political pamphlets by Halifax published during his lifetime, only two are known to survive in his own hand: that is, A Rough Draught of a New Model at Sea, two drafts of which are among the Finch Manuscripts (*HaG 44-45), and Some Cautions offered to the Consideration of those who are to choose Members to serve in the ensuing Parliament, the autograph of which is among the Spencer Papers (*HaG 55).

Other Miscellaneous Remains

Autograph manuscripts of works unfinished or unpublished by Halifax are somewhat more numerous. A series of drafts, notes, memoranda, notebooks and journals by Halifax, found in various archives, are given separate entries below, in the Miscellaneous Remains sections (HaG 59-71), according to their present physical units. They include material on a variety of subjects, sometimes in more than one version, which, as Dr Brown has noted (Huntington Library Quarterly (1972), 156-7), were never intended to be read in their present form and which have demanded considerable editorial arrangement in his edition of the Works.

Many of Halifax's unpublished miscellaneous writings take the form of brief observations and aphorisms on specific subjects, usually written out in narrow columns (up to three to a page and representing successive stages of addition and revision). Many are written on loose sheets, often marked Misc.; others appear in alphabetically arranged commonplace books. These last items are notable contributions to an important literary sub-genre of the seventeenth century, one distinguished at the beginning of the century by the methodical compilations of Francis Bacon and at the end by those of John Locke who, indeed, devised A New Method of a Common-Place Book (first published in French in the Bibliothèque Universelle, 1686, and in an English translation in Locke's Posthumous Works, 1706). It is probable that what was published in 1750 as Halifax's Political, Moral, and Miscellaneous Thoughts and Reflections (Foxcroft, II, 489-528) was a very similar commonplace book or collection of unbound Miscellanies, although the published version may well represent an editorial selection and rearrangement (see Brown, Huntington Library Quarterly (1972), 155-6). Some virtually identical aphorisms are found in the extant commonplace books, which suggests that Halifax was accustomed to re-copying and re-ordering his observations by way of literary refinement, so that the true extent of this process is not necessarily represented fully by the surviving manuscripts.

Letters and Documents

Other surviving papers of Halifax fall outside the purview of a strictly literary survey but may be summarized briefly. Many scores of letters by Halifax survive, the majority in the autograph originals, some in the hands of amanuenses or copied in letterbooks. A number of other letters by him are now lost but were printed in earlier publications from about 1700 onwards. Perhaps the greater part (though by no means all) of Halifax's extant correspondence is edited in Foxcroft. However, an additional series is printed in Dorothy Lane Poole, Some Unpublished Letters of George Savile, Lord Halifax, to Gilbert Burnet, English Historical Review, 26 (1911), 535-42, and no doubt many more letters by him will come to light in due course.

Currently known locations include the following:

  • Marquess of Bath, Longleat House (passim, including Thynne Papers, Vols. XV, ff. 3r-54r, and XXXV, ff. 67r-73r).
  • Bodleian Library (MSS Add. A. 191, ff. 74-94; Tanner 28, ff. 332, 366).
  • British Library (Add. MSS 9828, f. 18r; 15892, ff. 108r, 119r; 22183, ff. 139r, 141r, 144r; 28053, f. 5r; 28896, f. 5r; 32680, ff. 81r, 137r; 63752-63781 (Preston archive, passim); 75301-75350, 75359-75363 (Althorp Papers, passim); Loan MS 29/187, ff. 179r-82r, 283r; Stowe MSS 200, ff. 224r, 433r, 453r; 201, f. 381r; 202, ff. 251r, 332r; 204, f. 318r; 206, f. 55).
  • Centre for Kentish Studies, Maidstone (U 1590 C7/27 and C474).
  • Duke of Devonshire, Chatsworth House (Hardwick 58; Letters 60, 60.3, 60.4, 60.5; MS Correspondence Vol. II [green morocco box in cabinet]; Box of Halifax and Nottingham letters and documents in cabinet).
  • University of Kansas.
  • National Archives, Kew (SP 8/1, pt 2, ff. 90r-5r, 132r-5r, 143r-6r, 155r-6r, 203r-8r, 244r-5r [nine letters to William of Orange]; SP 9/193 [nineteenth-century transcripts]; SP 78/100-1; SP 84/125-6 (ff. 121r-2v); SP 84/190/34 (f. 35r)).
  • University of Nottingham (Galway MSS).
  • Warwickshire County Record Office (Denbigh MSS, C8/20-22).
  • Yale (Osb MSS Files 6479-6480, formerly Osborn Files/Halifax).
  • Letters in Rodd's sale catalogues for 1836, item 623, and 1847, item 1973.
  • Alfred Morrison collection (now dispersed; quoted in Catalogue of the Collection of…Alfred Morrison, II (1885), p. 225).
  • T.E.P. Lefroy papers (now dispersed, recorded in HMC, 1st Report (1870), Appendix, p. 56, including two letters sold at Sotheby's, 3 May 1889, lot 41, to J. Webster).
  • A letter sold at Christie's, 29 April 1981, lot 50.

Facsimile examples of autograph letters by Halifax may be found in Lawrence B. Phillips, The Autographic Album (London, 1866), p. 107; in Joseph Netherclift, A Collection of A Hundred Characteristic and Interesting Autograph Letters (London, 1899), p. 83; and in Sotheby's sale catalogue, 11 July 1986, lot 303 (Preston archives). The order signed by Halifax and others for bringing Samuel Pepys from the Tower to the Council Chamber, 2 June 1679, is reproduced in facsimile in Colonel Sir Henry James, Facsimiles of National Manuscripts from William the Conqueror to Queen Anne, 4 vols (Southampton, 1865-8), IV, No. LXIV.

Collections of letters written to Halifax by his many correspondents, besides those in the Spencer Papers mentioned above, include the Devonshire muniments at Chatsworth (Halifax Collection, Group C; Letters 55-9, 60.2; Box of Halifax and Nottingham letters and documents in cabinet); in the Savile of Rufford Papers (Nottinghamshire Record Office, DDSR and DDSR addit.); in the National Archives, Kew (passim); and in a letterbook of Richard Graham, first Viscount Preston at Yale (Osborn MS fb 83).

Many other miscellaneous documents copied or signed by Halifax, chiefly in an official capacity, are found in such repositories as: the Bodleian Library (MSS Rawl. A. 139, B, p. 278; Rawl. D. 863, f. 17r); British Library (Add. MSS 22183, f. 139r; 28103, f. 72r; 32095, f. 123r; 34195, f. 85r; Egerton MS 2618, f. 140r); Historical Society of Pennsylvania (Simon Gratz Collection, British Statesmen, Case 9, Box 35); Huntington (HA 10685); Pierpont Morgan Library (R. of E. v. James II and v. William III; Royal House of Stuart v. 3, pp. 6-9); and National Archives, Kew (SP 29/421/64; SP 78/134/73-5 (ff. 78r-80v); SP 84/190/52).

Principal Writings

As for Halifax's main writings, a number of Halifax's political pamphlets had wide contemporary circulation in manuscript before they were published. Halifax was himself usually responsible for initiating such circulation, although on at least one occasion a tract was copied and circulated without his authorization. The Lady's New Year's Gift: or, Advice to a Daughter — one of his most widely known works — was surreptitiously published in 1687/8, it seems, through the dishonesty of the scribe to whom the author's manuscript was originally entrusted (see Foxcroft, II, 379). Among other things, it is now possible to record no fewer than 23 scribal copies of Halifax's most celebrated work, The Character of a Trimmer (HaG 3-22.8), of which only four were known to Foxcroft. What might possibly be other copies of the work — some of them perhaps overlapping with items given entries below — were recorded earlier. One, written very fair, was among the manuscripts of the antiquary Peter Le Neve (1661-1729) sold by John Wilcox on 19 March 1730/1, lot 85, to the antiquary Thomas Martin (1697-1771). Another, dated 1684, was sold at Sotheby's, 6 December 1811 (7th day), lot 1444, to the bibliographer Joseph Haslewood (1769-1933). Another, in a folio volume including a petition of the gentlemen of Kent and a list of ships in 1664-7, was sold by Sotheby's, 1 July 1861 (Tenison sale), lot 14 to the bookseller Joseph Lilly. What may have been the same volume was sold, with other of Lilly's stock, at Sotheby's, 27 January 1873, lot 1382, to Hamilton. Yet another, beautifully written, dated 1688, and …apparently in the same handwriting, was owned by one F. M. S. and reported in N&Q, 4 (3 May 1873), 364. And yet another, comprising 162 quarto pages, was sold at Sotheby's, 31 January 1956, lot 445, to Pickering.

Another widely circulated tract, the Maxims of State, survives in at least seventeen manuscript texts (HaG 27-42), two of them among the Finch Papers. A Rough Draught of a New Model at Sea is represented by nine copies (HaG 46-54) in addition to the two holograph drafts (*HaG 44-45), including one copy directly transcribed from the second autograph draft by Halifax's friend, the diplomat Sir William Trumbull (HaG 47). In addition to the holograph (*HaG 55), three copies (two of them owned by Trumbull and Robert Harley respectively) are also recorded for Some cautions offered to the Consideration of those who are to choose Members to serve in the ensuing Parliament (HaG 56-58). Further contemporary copies of any of these tracts could well come to light in due course.

Alexander Sion

Certain scribal manuscripts of works by Halifax are of particular interest since they are known to be in the hand of one of his personal amanuenses. Among other things, this scribe later wrote an account of Halifax under the title Saviliana/or/The Works/of/George Savile/Late Marquis of Halifax/In four Tracts/The Character of a Trimmer/A Letter to a Dissenter/The Anatomy of an Equivalent/and/Advice to a Daughter, this being evidently intended as an introduction to a posthumous edition of four of Halifax's tracts, an edition which, however, did not actually materialize (possibly because of the appearance of Matthew Gillyflower's edition of Halifax's Miscellanies in 1700). The extant manuscript is among the Spencer Papers in the British Library (HaG 72). Various suggestions have been made as to the identity of this scribe, the candidates including William Mompesson, Edward Wilson, Charles Hauses, Charles Dartiquenave and M. Rambaud. The scribe has now been positively identified by M.N. Brown, however, as Alexander Sion (1654-1730), a Huguenot refugee whom Halifax appointed as his domestic chaplain some time after 23 October 1690 and whom he presented to the rectory of Barrowby in Lincolnshire in 1693. At least two letters written and signed by him survive: one written to Halifax in 1693, now in a box of miscellaneous Halifax and Nottingham papers in the cabinet at Chatsworth House; and another written to the second Lord Halifax in 1697, now among the Savile papers in the Nottinghamshire Record Office (DDSR 212/6). Besides Saviliana, Sion was responsible for one of the copies of The Character of a Trimmer (HaG 5); for copying most of the entries into one of Halifax's commonplace books (*HaG 71); for two of Halifax's library catalogues (discussed below); and for a translation into French of Halifax's tract The Lady's New Year's Gift: or, Advice to a Daughter. This translation is preserved in a series of four autograph revised drafts by Sion in Cambridge University Library, their chronological sequence having been established by M.N. Brown (HaG 25.2-25.8). This work too was intended for publication and was, in fact, printed in London in 1692 for James Partridge and Matthew Gillyflower, who in 1688 had published the Second Edition Corrected by the Original of The Lady's New Year's Gift.

Halifax's Library

The two library catalogues in Sion's hand are also in Cambridge University Library: namely, MS Dd. 2. 14, ff. 2-49 (A Catalogue of the Books In the Lower Library London [i.e. at Halifax House in St James's Square], 1692) and MS Dd. 9. 51, ff. 2-26 (A Catalogue of the books In the Library of Rufford belonging to My Lord Marquiss of Halifax In the year 1693, including items marked as being put up in boxes, in London, in order to be sent down). These two catalogues can be supplemented by three further, anonymous, catalogues in the same repository which have been clearly identified by M.N. Brown as also relating to Halifax's library at a slightly earlier period: namely, MS Dd. 9. 3, ff. 2-24 (14. Jan. 1679. Catalogus Librorum Londini Remanentium); MS Oo. 6. 108 (c), ff. 2-34 (Catalogue of the Books in ye Liberary In London: Taken Septbr ye 3. 1683); and (in the same hand as the last item) Ms Oo. 6. 108 (c), ff. 35-80 (A Catalogue of the Books in the Libriary at London. Taken September the third in the yeare 1684). Altogether, and allowing for some measure of overlap, these catalogues bear witness to a library of perhaps some 2,000 volumes, in English, French, Latin, Italian and Spanish. Unfortunately the books have long been dispersed. Nothing is known of those at Halifax House (since demolished) following its sale in 1720, while none of Halifax's books appears to be retained at Rufford today. There is a possibility that some of these books passed to Barbara Savile (d.1797), sister (and in 1784 sole heir) of Sir George Savile, eighth Baronet. In 1752, at Rufford, she married Richard Lumley (1725-82), fourth Earl of Scarborough. The total effects of Lord Scarborough himself were auctioned at Sandbeck in Yorkshire by Christie's on 19-27 August 1785, lots 1-110. Some hundreds of books were in this sale but were largely unspecified and probably eighteenth-century, so that little or nothing seems likely to have derived from Halifax's library.

Indeed, the only volumes from Halifax's library which it seems possible to trace today are manuscripts. A seventeenth-century transcript of the medieval cartulary of Rufford Abbey, containing an inscription and some marginal annotations in Halifax's hand, is now in the British Library (Harley MS 1063) and, like one of the miscellaneous collections recorded below (*HaG 64), was once owned by the elder John Anstis (1669-1744). The original cartulary itself is still owned by the Savile family and is in the British Library among the Loan MSS (No. 41). What was apparently another of Halifax's manuscript volumes was described as a composite collection of Papers on Coin Trade, &c. addressed to Lord Halifax by Sir William Petty, endorsed by Lord Halifax, bound together…folio. This was sold in the Phillipps sale at Sotheby's on 9 June 1898, lot 624. It may be mentioned that the original autograph draft of one of these tracts — the Quantulumcunque concerning Money of 1682, which was printed with a dedication to Halifax in 1695 — is still preserved among the Petty Papers now in the British Library (Add. MS 72865, ff. 148r-53r, a copy by an amanuensis being in Add. MS 72854, ff. 128r-32v).

Yet another manuscript volume possibly owned by Halifax was described by William Oldys (in the Biographia Britannica, Vol. III (1750), p. 2061) as a Medley of diverting Sayings, Stories, Characters, &c. in Verse and Prose, written in Quarto, about the Year 1686, (as it is attested in another hand) by Charles Cotton, Esq; some time in the Library of the Earl of Hallifax. This manuscript is not, however, mentioned in any of the catalogues of Halifax's library and it is just possible that Oldys was referring to Charles Montagu (1661-1715), who became Earl of Halifax in 1714 shortly before his death and whose manuscripts (but not this one) were sold by Samuel Baker (viz. Sotheby's) on 28 November 1760.

The Canon

The canon of Halifax's published works has been largely established in Foxcroft, who has accepted as her basis the posthumous edition of Halifax's collected works, published in 1700 under the title Miscellanies by Matthew Gillyflower. Her decision is supported — although for somewhat different reasons — by M.N. Brown in his edition of the Works. One short work which she accepted despite some uncertainty of evidence is the Character of Doctor Burnet, which was first printed in 1734 by Thomas Burnet in his edition of his father's History of his Own Time. Thomas Burnet allegedly printed his text from a Copy …taken from one given to the Bishop, in the Marquiss of Halifax's own Hand-writing, which was in the Editor's hands, but is at present mislaid. The attribution to Halifax is supported by the discovery of a text which was evidently sent to Thomas Burnet (to replace the one he lost) by a certain John Macknay, who had made a copy some years earlier from the Origenal (by ye Marquis of Hallifax) (see HaG 59). The one notable addition which can be made to Foxcroft's version of the canon is the early Observations upon a Late Libel (1681), the printer's manuscript of which (HaG 43) was discovered by M.N. Brown in 1971. Following the attribution of this work to Halifax in Hugh Macdonald's edition in 1940, its authorship has been disputed and as recently as 1969 it was rejected from the canon in J.P. Kenyon's Penguin edition of Halifax's Complete Works (see p. 345). However, the attribution has been warmly supported by H. C. Foxcroft in New Light on George Savile, First Marquis of Halifax, The Trimmer, History, NS 26 (1941-2), 176-87 (pp. 179-81) and by M.N. Brown (see particularly HLQ (1972), 143-5).

As regards the Halifax apocrypha, there seems to be no good reason to question Foxcroft's rejection of various other tracts that have been occasionally attributed to Halifax (see her discussion, II, 532-40). Some of these tracts appeared in the posthumous publication Miscellanies Historical and Philological: Being a Curious Collection of Private Papers found in the study of a Noble-Man lately deceas'd (London, 1703) and were allegedly found among the Manuscripts of the late Famous M— of H—, a claim likely to be only a publisher's ploy to boost their significance. Some of these tracts — nowhere else ascribed to Halifax — are to be found in a manuscript volume compiled c.1681-2 by Sir William Haward (d.1690s), which is now in the Bodleian (MS Don. b. 8). Yet other manuscript texts of individual tracts in the apocrypha are to be found: for instance, a contemporary copy of A Letter from a Clergy-Man in the City, to His Friend in the Country (1688) is at the University of Kansas (MS P185), and the satirical poem The Club-men of the House of Commons (Let noble Sir Positive lead the Van) of 1694 is found in various collections of poems on affairs of state, including Bodleian (MSS Eng. poet. c. 18, ff. 153v, 152, 154-5; Locke c. 32, f. 31) and British Library (Egerton MS 2623, f. 76; Harley MS 7315, f. 237). A further collection of political tracts not mentioned in Foxcroft was owned by Wriothesley Russell (1680-1711), second Duke of Bedford, now in the library of the Duke of Bedford, Woburn Abbey (HMC MS No. 270). It is described on its title-page as Certain Select Manuscripts on Several Subjects Collected by George late Marq: of Halifax and, in addition to tracts by Finch, Robert Harley, Sir Charles Sedley, Charles Montagu and others, includes a text of Halifax's own Maxims of State (HaG 29). However, the nature of this text (derived from one of the copies which circulated with Montagu's later additions) does not support the likelihood that any of the items in this volume did actually derive from papers owned by Halifax himself.

A final apocryphal work which may be mentioned only in order that it may be dismissed is A letter written to Mr Van R— de M— (as is supposed) by my ld Hallifax, a contemporary copy of which (on six folio pages) is at Worcester College, Oxford (MS 237, items 43-4). Whoever the author was, it is stylistically quite unlike anything written by the first Marquess of Halifax.

Abbreviations

Brown
The Works of George Savile Marquis of Halifax, ed. Mark N. Brown, 3 vols (Oxford, 1989).
Brown, HLQ (1972)
Mark N. Brown, The Works of George Savile Marquis of Halifax: Dates and Circumstances of Composition, Huntington Library Quarterly, 35 (1971-2), 143-57.
Brown, HLQ (1974)
Mark N. Brown, Trimmers and Moderates in the Reign of Charles II, Huntington Library Quarterly, 37 (1973-4), 311-36.
Foxcroft
H.C. Foxcroft, The Life and Letters of Sir George Savile, Bart. First Marquis of Halifax &c. with a new edition of his works now for the first time collected and revised, 2 vols (London, New York and Bombay, 1898; reprinted New York and London, 1968).

Prose

Works Published in Halifax's Lifetime

Advice to a Daughter

See HaG 23-25.

The Anatomy of an Equivalent

First published, anonymously, [in London, 1688]. Foxcroft, II, 425-6. Brown, I, 265-90.

HaG 1

List of headings relating to this work, with corrections, extrapolated from a printed edition, on a single folio leaf and a small slip. Late 17th century.

This MS recorded in Brown, I, 398.

A large folio composite volume of miscellaneous letters and tracts, in various hands, 360 leaves, in modern morocco gilt.

HaG 2

Copy, in a single hand, transcribed from a printed source, eleven quarto leaves (plus five blanks), disbound.

Late 17th century

This MS recorded in Brown, I, 398; also in Brown, HLQ (1972), p. 149, and in Brown, HLQ (1974), p. 334.

The Character of a Trimmer

First published, ascribed to the Honourable Sir W[illiam] C[oventry], in London, 1688. Foxcroft, II, 273-342. Brown, I, 178-243.

HaG 3

Copy, in a Scottish professional hand, on 128 octavo pages.

Late 17th century

Sotheby's, 29 April 1969, lot 341.

This MS collated in Brown, I, 345-96.

Nicolas Barker, London ([no shelfmark])
HaG 4 c.1684-90s

Copy, in a professional hand, headed probably by Sir William Trumbull Charactr of a Trimmer Written A° 1684, 35 folio leaves, in paper wrappers.

Edited from this MS in Brown.

Two unbound MSS of the Marquess of Halifax's Character of a Trimmer, 78 folio leaves.

Volume CCCLXX of the Trumbull Papers, of the Trumbull family, including chiefly William Trumbull (1576/80?-1635), diplomat and government official. Later belonging to the Marquess of Downshire, of Easthampstead Park. Sotheby's, The Trumbull Papers, 14 December 1989, lot 55.

HaG 5 c.1684-90s

Copy, in the hand of Halifax's chaplain and amanuensis Alexander Sion (1654-1730), 39 folio leaves (rectos only), slightly imperfect, in paper wrappers.

This MS collated in Brown, I, 345-96. Recorded in Brown, HLQ (1972), p. 147. Facsimile of the first page in Sotheby's, The Trumbull Papers, 14 December 1989, lot 55, p. 146.

Two unbound MSS of the Marquess of Halifax's Character of a Trimmer, 78 folio leaves.

Volume CCCLXX of the Trumbull Papers, of the Trumbull family, including chiefly William Trumbull (1576/80?-1635), diplomat and government official. Later belonging to the Marquess of Downshire, of Easthampstead Park. Sotheby's, The Trumbull Papers, 14 December 1989, lot 55.

HaG 6

Copy, in a Scottish professional hand, 113 duodecimo leaves, with a title page, as Written in anno. 1684, in 19th-century half morocco.

Late 17th century

Acquired from J. Pearson, 2 June 1877.

This MS collated and used in part as a copy-text in Foxcroft (as MS. B). Collated in Brown, I, 345-96.

HaG 7

Copy, in a professional hand, with some alterations in a later hand, on 21 quarto leaves. Late 17th century.

This MS collated and used in part as a copy-text in Foxcroft (as MS C.). Collated in Brown, I, 345-96.

A quarto omposite volume of three tracts.

The British Library: Lansdowne MSS (Lansdowne MS 776 ff. 49r-69r)
HaG 8

Copy in a scribal hand on 79 folio leaves.

Late 17th century

This MS collated in Foxcroft (as MS. A). Collated in Brown, I, 345-96.

HaG 9

Copy, in a professional hand, on 122 octavo leaves.

Late 17th century

Once owned by the Rev. Philip Bliss (1787-1857), antiquary and book collector. Sotheby's, 9 August 1858 (Bliss sale), lot 2440. Sold by William, Ross & Co., 30 January 1918.

This MS collated in Brown, I, 345-96.

HaG 10

Copy, in a professional hand, untitled, on 71 folio pages.

c.1690s

This MS collated in Brown, I, 345-96.

Cumbria Archives, Carlisle (DLons/L13/9/The Character of a Trimmer/Box 1078)
HaG 11

Copy, in a professional hand, on 232 folio pages.

Late 17th century

Among the papers of the Egerton family, Earls of Bridgewater.

This MS collated in Brown, I, 345-96.

HaG 12

Copy, in a single professional rounded hand, on 84 of 90 folio leaves, in contemporary calf.

Late 17th century

Fols 84v-90v containing, in a later hand, A Catalogue of Books belonging To Patrick Viscount of Garnock. Kilbirny, 17 Apll. 1727, and f. ir inscribed This Book Belongs to Garnock. Among the muniments of the Earl of Crawford and Balcarres, formerly in the John Rylands Library, University of Manchester.

This MS collated in Brown, I, 345-96.

HaG 13

Copy, in a professional hand, 235 folio pages.

Late 17th century

Quaritch's sale catalogue No. 629 (1945), item 259.

This MS collated in Brown, I, 345-96. Recorded in C.N. Greenough and J.M. French, A Bibliography of the Theophrastan Character in England (Cambridge, Mass., 1947), p. 149.

King's College, Cambridge (Keynes MS 215)
HaG 14

Copy, in a professional hand, on 64 folio pages.

Late 17th century

This MS recorded in HMC, 3rd Report (1872), Appendix, p. 189. Collated in Foxcroft (as MS D) and in Brown, I, 345-96.

HaG 15

Copy, in a professional hand, on 32 quarto leaves.

Late 17th century

From the muniments of the Hays family, Earls of Erroll, of Slains Castle, Aberdeenshire.

This MS collated in Brown, I, 345-96.

HaG 16

Copy, in a professional hand, on 52 folio pages.

Ascribed, in a later hand in pencil, to Charles Sackville, Earl of Dorset.

Late 17th century

Donated in 1927 by the Gramercy Bookshop. Formerly MS *49X134.

This MS collated in Brown, I, 345-96.

HaG 16.5

Copy, in a neat italic hand, with a title-page and table of contents, as writen in Anno 1684, ii + 219 octavo pages, in contemporary calf (rebacked).

c.1684

Donated by James Orchard Halliwell-Phillipps (1820-89), literary scholar and book collector.

Plymouth Proprietary Library (Halliwell-Phillipps No. 45)
HaG 17

Copy, in a professional hand (the same as in HaG 22), on 179 folio pages.

Late 17th century

Once owned by John Hervey (1665-1751), first Baron Ickworth and first Earl of Bristol, of Ickworth, near Bury St Edmunds.

This MS discussed in Robert Gathorne-Hardy, Halifax's The Character of a Trimmer: Some Observations in the Light of a Manuscript from Ickworth, The Library, 5th Ser. 14 (1959), 117-23. Collated in Brown, I, 345-96.

HaG 18

Copy, on vi + 96 large quarto pages, in a vellum deed.

Partly in a professional hand, partly (the Preface and p. 1) in the hand of Narcissus Luttrell (1657-1732), annalist and book collector, and inscribed by him on the title-page By Sr William Temple. Baro. abt. Anno. 1680.

Late 17th century

Sotheby's, 4 May 1936 (Luttrell sale), lot 175. Maggs's sale catalogue No. 717 (1942), item 1546.

This MS recorded in C.N. Greenough and J.M. French, A Bibliography of the Theophrastan Character in England (Cambridge, Mass., 1947), p. 149. Collated in Brown, I, 345-96.

HaG 19

Copy, in a professional hand, on 133 quarto pages.

This MS collated in Brown, I, 345-96.

A composite volume of MSS.

Late 17th century

Inscribed and possibly once owned by the Scottish advocate John Spotiswood (1666-1728). Pickering & Chatto, sale catalogue No. 353 (1953), item 655.

Yale, Osborn, others (Osborn MS c 125/4 [unspecified page numbers])
HaG 20

Copy, in a professional hand, on 82 folio pages.

Late 17th century

Formerly in Files/Halifax.

This MS collated in Brown, I, 345-96.

Yale, Osborn, others (Osb MSS File 6478)
HaG 21

Copy, in a probably professional hand, with a title-page The Character of a Trimmer wrn in anno 1684, on 118 small octavo leaves, in contemporary calf.

Late 17th century

Bookplate of Sir Thomas Brooke, Bt, FSA (1830-1908), Yorkshire antiquary and book collector, of Armitage Bridge.

This MS collated in Brown, I, 345-96.

HaG 22

Copy, in a professional hand, the same as in HaG 17, with a title-page in a roman hand, 185 folio pages, in contemporary vellum.

Late 17th century

Bookplate of Thomas Philip (1781-1859), Earl de Grey, of Wrest Park, Bedfordshire. Maggs's sale catalogue Mercurius Britannicus No. 152 (June 1956), p. 10. The Collection of Robert S Pirie, Sotheby's, 2 December 2015, lot 413.

This MS collated in Brown, I, 345-96.

HaG 22.5

Copy, on 162 quarto pages.

Late 17th century

Sotheby's, 31 January 1956, lot 445, to Pickering.

Untraced, miscellaneous ([Pickering MS])
The Lady's New Year's Gift: or, Advice to a Daughter

First published, anonymously, in London, 1688. Foxcroft, II, 379-424. Brown, II, 363-406.

See also Introduction.

HaG 23

Series of extracts from a printed edition, headed Ld Marq of Hallifax's Advice to a Daughter.

A quarto composite miscellany, in three or more hands, 76 leaves, in quarter-leather marbled boards.

Late 17th century
The British Library: Lansdowne MSS (Lansdowne MS 1185 ff. 56r-64v)
HaG 23.5

Extracts, inscribed Advice to a Daughter, by ye ld hallifax.

A folio miscellany of extracts, in a single cursive hand, 351 leaves, in modern half brown morocco on marbled boards.

c.1685-1700s

Sotheby's, 13 July 1855, lot 1364.

HaG 24

Copy in a professional hand, with alterations and interlineations, untitled, on 68 folio pages, imperfect and lacking the ending.

Muniments of the Lowther family, Earls of Lonsdale.

Late 17th century

Probably once owned by John Lowther, first Viscount Lonsdale (1655-1700).

This MS collated in Brown, II, 506-13.

Cumbria Archives, Carlisle (DLons/L.14 Various books and papers [no item number])
The Lady's New Year's Gift: or, Advice to a Daughter [French translation by Alexander Sion]

First published in London, 1692, for James Partridge and Matthew Gillyflower, who in 1688 had published the Second Edition Corrected by the Original of The Lady's New Year's Gift.

A Letter to a Dissenter

First published, anonymously, in London, 1687. Foxcroft, II, 361-78. Brown, I, 250-64.

HaG 26

Copy, in a professional hand, transcribed from a printed edition, on sixteen quarto pages.

End of 17th century

This MS recorded in Brown, I, 397, and in Brown, HLQ (1974), p. 334.

Aberdeen University Library (Macbean Collection)
Maxims of the Great Almansor

First published, anonymously, under the heading The following Maxims were found amongst the Papers of the Great Almanzor… [&c] (London, 1693). Foxcroft, II, 447-53. Brown, I, 292-5.

HaG 27

Copy of 33 maxims, headed Maxims of State or Obsevations on Government by the late Marqs. of H--x: 1694. The text followed (on pp. 81-4) by fourteen supplementary maxims by Charles Montagu.

This MS collated in Brown, I, 398-401.

A folio volume of state tracts and speeches, entitled (probably mistakenly) Certain Select Manuscripts on Several Subjects Collected by George late Marq. of Halifax, in two or more professional rounded hands, with a table of contents, x + 320 pages, in contemporary vellum boards gilt.

c.early 1700s

Booklabel of Wriothesley Russell (1680-1711), second Duke of Bedford, dated 1703.

Recorded in HMC, 2nd Report (1871), Appendix, p. 4.

The Duke of Bedford, Woburn Abbey (HMC MS No. 270 pp. 71-80)
HaG 28 c.1688

Copy of 33 maxims, headed The following Maxims weare found by a Jew amongst ye Papers of ye Greate Almanzor, & though they must loose a good deale of their originall Spirit by ye translation, yet they seeme to be soe applicable to all times yt it is thought noe disservice to make them Publick, on a single folio leaf, docketed 1688.

This MS collated in Brown, I, 398-401. Recorded in Brown, HLQ (1972), p. 150.

A folio composite volume of state letters and papers, 382 leaves.

Collected by William Sancroft (1617-93), Archbishop of Canterbury.

Bodleian Library, Tanner Collection (MS Tanner 28/2 f. 269r-v)
HaG 29

Copy of 33 maxims, dated 1694, in a neat professional hand, the text followed (on f. 28r-v) by 14 supplementary maxims by Charles Montagu dated 1695.

This MS used in part as a copy-text in Foxcroft (as MS A). Collated in Brown, I, 398-401.

A folio volume of state and parliamentary papers, in several professional hands, 176 leaves (plus blanks), in 19th-century half morocco.

c.1700
HaG 29.5

Copy of 33 Maxims, headed The following maxims were found by A Jew Amongst the papers of the Great Almazor....

A tall folio formal miscellany of poems and prose on affairs of state, in several rounded hands, with (ff. ivr-vr) a Catalogue of titles, 186 leaves, in contemporary blind-stamped calf within modern half-morocco.

c.1700s

Bookplate of Basil Feilding (1668-1717), fourth Earl of Denbigh, dated 1703. Sold in 1834 by Thomas Thorpe. Owned by the Rev. Dr Martin Joseph Routh (1755-1854), scholar, President of Magdalen College, Oxford. Sotheby's, 5 July 1855 (Routh sale), lot 178.

HaG 30

Copy of 33 maxims, in a stylish professional hand, headed The following Maximes were found by a Jew amongst Papers of the Great Almanzor and tho they must loose a good Deale of their Originall Spiritt by ye Translation Yet they seem to be applicable to all times That it is thought no diservice to Mankind to make them Publique, superscribed By the Marq. of Halifax, on four pages of two conjugate folio leaves, docketed (f. 9v) Lot 725/10. c.1700.

This MS collated in Brown, I, 398-401.

A tall folio composite volume of chiefly verse MSS, in various hands and paper sizes, 91 leaves, mounted on guards, in half red morocco.

At least some individual items here were later owned by Sir Thomas Osborne (1632-1712), first Earl of Danby, Marquess of Carmarthen and Duke of Leeds, politician. Sotheby's, 6-10 April 1869 (Leeds sale), including lot 725, item 10.

HaG 31 c.1700

Copy of 33 maxims on four quarto leaves, being the first of Certain observations on Government With Moral Reflections. By 3: Several hands and dated 1692. The text followed (ff. 409v-10v) by 14 supplementary maxims by Charles Montagu and (ff. 410v-14) by 44 maxims by John, Lord Somers (1697).

This MS used in part as copy-text in Foxcroft (as MS B).

A tall folio composite volume of state letters and miscellaneous papers, in various hands and paper sizes, 415 leaves, mounted on guards, in modern half red morocco.

Volume V of papers of the Malet family, baronets, of Wilbury, Wiltshire, including papers collected and endorsed by George Harbin (c.1665-1744), nonjuror, historical writer, and librarian at Longleat to Thomas Thynne (1640-1714), first Viscount Weymouth, and his family.

HaG 32

Copy of 24 maxims, headed The following Maximes found by a Jew among the papers of ye Great Almansor and though they must loose a good deal of Their Originall Spirit by ye: Translation yet they seem to be so applicable to all Times that it is thought no disservice to Mankind to make them publick, on a single folio leaf. c.1700.

This MS collated in Brown, I, 398-401.

A large folio composite volume of miscellaneous letters and tracts, in various hands, 360 leaves, in modern morocco gilt.

HaG 33

Copy of 33 maxims, dated 1694, on two folio leaves. The text followed (ff. 9v-11r) by fourteen supplementary maxims by Charles Montagu. c.1700.

This MS collated in Brown, I, 398-401.

A folio composite volume of state tracts and papers, 63 leaves.

The British Library: Sloane Collection (Sloane MS 2680 ff. 8r-9v)
HaG 34

Copy of 33 maxims, headed The following Maxims were found by a Jew amongst the Papers of the Great Almanzor, And tho' they must loose a good deal of their Originall Spirit by the Translation, yet they seem to be so applicable to all tymes, that it is thought no Disservice to make them publick. The text followed (ff. 175r-6r) by 14 supplementary maxims by Charles Montagu.

This MS collated in Brown, I, 398-401.

A tall folio miscellany of poems on affairs of state, in professional hands, 257 leaves, in modern calf gilt.

In three sections each with its own title-page.

First section: A Collection of Poems and Lampoons &ca Not yet Printed.

Second section (f. 102r): A Collection of Choice Poems, Satyrs, & Lampoons From 1672 to 1688 Never printed.

Third section (f. 146r): A Collection of Poems. From 1688 to 1699. 1703/4.

Early 1700s
HaG 35

Copy of 33 maxims, headed The following Maxims were found by a Jew amongst the Papers of the Great Amanzor, and tho' they must loose a good deal of their Originall Spirit by the Translation, yet they seem to be so applicable to all tymes, that it is thought no disservice to make them publick, followed (pp. 149-50) by fourteen supplementary maxims by Charles Montagu.

This MS collated in Brown, I, 398-401.

A folio miscellany of poems on affairs of state, entitled A Collection Of the choicest Poems, Satyrs, and Lampoons from the beginning of the late Revolution in 1688 to 1698, x + 336 pages plus index.

c.1700

Probably once owned by the Heveningham family. Among the manuscripts of the Coke family, Earls of Leicester, including collections of Sir Edward Coke (1552-1634), lawyer and politician.

Recorded in HMC, 9th Report (1883), Appendix.

HaG 36

Copy of 33 maxims, in a professional hand, on ten pages of a folio booklet in a decorated gilt wrapper.

Headed Certaine Observations Or Maxims of State. By the late Marq of Hal--x, the text followed (pp. 10-12) by 14 supplementary maxims by Mr: Cha[rles] M[ontagu].

c.1700

Among the papers of the Egerton family, Earls of Bridgewater.

This MS collated in Brown, I, 398-401.

HaG 37 c.1700

Copy of 33 maxims, in a professional rounded hand, on seven folio pages, being the first of a series of three sets of Observations on Government, or certain Maxims of State, with Moral Reflections, and dated 1692; the text followed (pp. [8-10] by fourteen supplementary maxims by Charles Montagu, dated 1695, and then (pp. [10-16]) by 44 maxims by John, Lord Somers, dated 1697.

This MS collated in Brown, I, 398-401.

A tall folio composite volume of state papers and tracts, in various hands and paper sizes, 89 items, unfoliated, in later black morocco gilt.

Volume IV of the collections of Edmund Gibson (1669-1748), Bishop of London.

Lambeth Palace Library (MS 932 No. 85)
HaG 38

Copy of 33 maxims, on the first two pages of a conjugate pair of folio leaves.

This MS collated in Brown, I, 398-401.

A collection of unbound papers of the Finch family, of Burley-on-the-Hill, Rutland.

c.1690s

Among the papers of the Finch family, of Burley-on-the-Hill, Rutland.

Leicestershire Record Office (DG. 7/Lit. 8 (Box 4975) [unnumbered item])
HaG 39

Copy of 33 maxims, on a pair of conjugate quarto leaves.

This MS collated in Brown, I, 398-401.

A collection of unbound papers of the Finch family, of Burley-on-the-Hill, Rutland.

c.1690s

Among the papers of the Finch family, of Burley-on-the-Hill, Rutland.

Leicestershire Record Office (DG. 7/Lit. 8 (Box 4975) [unnumbered item])
HaG 40

Copy of 33 maxims, headed Almanzor's Maxims, the text followed (on pp. 102-5) by fourteen supplementary maxims by Charles Montagu headed The Second Part.

This MS collated in Brown, I, 398-401.

A folio miscellany of poems on affairs of state, entitled A Collection of Poems and Lampoons &ca Not yet Edited, in a single professional rounded hand (the same as in University of Nottingham, Pw V 42 and University of Nottingham, Pw V 43), 444 pages (plus blanks and an eleven-page index), in contemporary calf.

c.1705
University of Nottingham (Pw V 44 pp. 94-102)
HaG 41

Copy of 33 maxims, in a professional italic hand (the same as that in HaG 42), on three pages of an unbound pair of conjugate folio leaves.

c.1700

Edited from this MS in Brown.

HaG 42

Copy of 33 maxims, in a professional hand (the same as that in HaG 41) on two conjugate folio leaves.

c.1700

This MS collated in Brown, I, 398-401.

Observations upon a Late Libel

First published, anonymously [in London, 1681]. Edited, and attributed to Halifax, by Hugh Macdonald (Cambridge, 1930). Brown, I, 150-69.

HaG 43

Copy in a professional hand, with printer's marks, being the printer's copy for the first edition, on twelve folio leaves, endorsed (f. 212v) by Rochester Observations on a late Libel call'd a Letter concerning the King's Declaration in ye time of King Charles ye. 2d.

Edited from this MS in Brown. Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark N. Brown, The Printer's Text of Halifax's Observations upon a Late Libel (1681), The Library, 5th Ser. 26 (1971), 259-63.

A tall folio composite volume of state papers and letters relating to affairs from 1675 to 1728, in various hands, 227 leaves, in 19th-century half-leather marbled boards.

Volume I of the papers of Laurence Hyde (1642-1711), first Earl of Rochester, politician.

[1681]
A Rough Draught of a New Model at Sea

First published, anonymously, in London, 1694. Foxcroft, II, 454-65. Brown, I, 296-308.

*HaG 44
Autograph

A first autograph draft, headed Tar[paulins], incomplete, on three folio leaves.

c.1693

Among papers of the Finch family of Burley-on-the-Hill, Rutland.

This MS collated in Brown, I, 309-14, with a facsimile page facing p. 310. Recorded in Brown, HLQ (1972), p. 151.

Leicestershire Record Office (DG. 7/Lit. 7/172-4)
*HaG 45 c.1693
Autograph

Autograph draft, on seven pages of two pairs of large conjugate folio leaves.

Edited from this MS in Brown, with a facsimile of the first page facing p. 296. Recorded in Brown, HLQ (1972), p. 151.

A collection of unbound papers of the Finch family of Burley-on-the-Hill, Rutland.

Leicestershire Record Office (DG. 7/Lit. 3 (Box 4974) [unnumbered item])
HaG 46

Copy, in a professional hand, with corrections, on two pairs of conjugate quarto leaves.

c.1690s

Among papers of the Belson and Barrett families of Milton Manor, Berkshire.

This MS collated in Brown, I, 309-14.

HaG 47

Copy, in the hand of Sir William Trumbull (1639-1716), lawyer and government official, transcribed directly from HaG 45, with (f. 48v-r rev.) a list of proposals relating to the tract, headed Heads &c. 29 November 1693.

This MS collated in Brown, I, 309-14, and the list of proposals edited, I, 308-9. Recorded in Brown, HLQ (1972), p. 152. Sotheby's, The Trumbull Papers, 14 December 1989, lot 56, with a facsimile example of the first page on p. 148.

Large folio volume of state papers and tracts, in several hands, written from both ends, i + 56 leaves (plus numerous blanks), in a contemporary vellum wallet binding with ties.

Volume CCCLXXIof the Trumbull Papers, of the Trumbull family, including chiefly William Trumbull (1576/80?-1635), diplomat and government official. Later belonging to the Marquess of Downshire, of Easthampstead Park. Formerly Berkshire Record Office Trumbull Add 88.

HaG 50

Copy, in a professional hand (the same as in HaG 49 and HaG 51), on eleven folio pages. c.1690s.

This MS collated in Brown, I, 309-14.

A folio composite volume of state tracts and speeches, in various professional hands, 280 leaves, in half red morocco gilt.

HaG 51 c.1690s

Copy, in a professional hand (the same as in HaG 49 and HaG 50), with a few corrections in another hand, on six folio leaves.

Edited from this MS in HMC, Portland X (1931), 20-8. Collated in Brown, I, 309-14.

A folio composite volume of naval papers, in various hands and paper sizes, ii + 458 leaves, mounted on guards, in modern half red morocco marbled boards.

Volume XLIV of the Portland Papers, owned by the Harley family, of Brampton Bryan, and related families of Vere, Hollis, and Cavendish, and of Cavendish-Bentinck, Dukes of Portland.

Formerly Loan MS 29/215.

HaG 52

Copy, in a professional hand, on twelve folio pages.

c.1690s

Among the muniments of the Lowther family, Earls of Lonsdale, and probably once owned by John Lowther, first Viscount Lonsdale (1655-1700).

This MS collated in Brown, I, 309-14.

HaG 53

Copy, in a professional hand, on twelve folio pages.

This MS collated in Brown, I, 309-14.

A collection of unbound papers of the Finch family of Burley-on-the-Hill, Rutland.

Leicestershire Record Office (DG. 7/Lit. 3 (Box 4974) [unnumbered item])
HaG 54

Copy, in a professional hand, on 38 folio pages.

c.1690s

Among the muniments of the Pakington family, of Westwood Park, Worcestershire, and probably once owned by Sir John Pakington, fourth Baronet (1671-1727).

This MS collated in Brown, I, 309-14.

Worcestershire Record Office (Hampton MSS 705: 349 BA 4739/2 (xxi))
Some Cautions offered to the Consideration of those who are to choose Members to serve in the ensuing Parliament

First published, anonymously, in London, 1695. Foxcroft, II, 466-88. Brown, I, 315-41.

*HaG 55 Early 1695
Autograph

Autograph.

Edited from this MS in Brown, with a facsimile of the first page facing I, 316. Recorded in Brown, HLQ (1972), p. 153.

A folio volume comprising two autograph MS works by Halifax, bound together, i + 48 leaves, mounted on guards, in modern dark green morocco gilt.

Volume LXVII of the archives of the Earl Spencer, of Althorp, Northamptonshire. Formerly Althorp Papers, C9 (1-2).

HaG 56 c.1690s

Copy, in a professional rounded hand, on 40 folio pages.

Formerly Berkshire Record Office, Trumbull Add 83(d).

This MS collated in Brown, I, 404-6.

A folio volume of parliamentary tracts and proceedings, in several largely professional hands, ii + 162 leaves, in contemporary speckled calf.

Volume CCCLXIIIof the Trumbull Papers, of the Trumbull family, including chiefly William Trumbull (1576/80?-1635), diplomat and government official. Later belonging to the Marquess of Downshire, of Easthampstead Park. Formerly Berkshire Record Office Trumbull Add 83.

HaG 57 c.1690s

Copy, in a professional hand, with a few corrections in other hands, on 15 folio leaves.

This MS collated in Brown, I, 404-6. Recorded in Brown, HLQ (1972), p. 153.

A folio composite volume of state papers and parliamentary journals, over 500 leaves.

HaG 58

Copy, in a professional hand, on 117 quarto pages.

c.1690s

This MS collated in Brown, I, 404-6.

Cumbria Archives, Carlisle (DLons/L13/9/Some Cautions/Box 1078)

Miscellaneous Remains

A Character of Dr. Burnet

First published at the end of Thomas Burnet's Life of his father appended to Gilbert Burnet, History of His Own Time, 2 vols (London, 1724-34), II, 725-6. Foxcroft, II, 529-31. Brown, II, 450-2.

HaG 59 Early 18th century

Copy, headed A Picture of the Author when Chapline of the Rolls [i.e. between 1675 and 1684], By the Most Noble George Marquis of Hallifax, endorsed N:B: The Title of this Papers was not in the Origenal (by ye Marquis of Hallifax) but was put to it by John Macknay at ye copieing of it into his Book, on both sides of a single folio leaf, together with an undated covering letter, on a quarto leaf, by Elizabeth Macknay to Thomas Burnet (...I have sent the copey you writ for. Mr Macknay sends his kindest servis to you...), incorporated in a quarto booklet of papers relating to Bishop Burnet in morocco boards.

Edited from this MS in Brown.

A folio guardbook of state and miscellaneous papers, in prose and verse, in various hands and paper sizes, unnumbered.

National Archives of Scotland (RH13/40 [unnumbered item])
HaG 59.5

Copy, in a professional hand, transcribed from HaG 59.8, headed in Thomas Burnet's hand His Character by the Marquess of Halifax.

This MS collated in Brown, II, 513-14.

Copy, in three hands, of Gilbert Burnet 's The History of my own Time and of Thomas Burnet's Life of his father, both with autograph corrections by their respective authors.

Late 17th-early 18th century

This MS collated in Brown, II, 513-14.

Bodleian Library, other MSS (MS Add. D. 16 ff. 234v-5r)
HaG 59.8

Copy in Thomas Burnet's hand.

This MS collated in Brown, pp. 513-14.

An early autograph draft of part of Gilbert Burnet's The History of my own Time, with his son Thomas Burnet's autograph Life of his father, iii + 146 folio leaves.

Late 17th-early 18th century
Bodleian Library, other MSS (MS Add. D. 21 ff. 142r, 92r)
A Character of Lady Pakington

First published in Brown (1989), II, 453-79.

*HaG 60
Autograph

Two autograph rough drafts of a character of Halifax's maternal aunt, Lady Dorothy Pakington, partly in pencil, untitled, on fifteen leaves of different sizes (plus blanks), the first draft on thirteen leaves, the second an incomplete draft on two leaves, also including two inserted pages of Misc[ellanies].

c.1680-95

Edited from this MS in Brown, with a facsimile of the first page facing II, 454.

Leicestershire Record Office (DG. 7/Lit. 4 (Box 4974))
Conversations between King William III and Lord Halifax, 1688-90

Journal of Halifax's conversations with William III between 30 December 1688 and 8 February 1688/9. First published in Foxcroft (1898), II, 201-52.

*HaG 61 c.1690
Autograph

Autograph journal of Halifax's conversation with William III between 30 December 1688 and (here) 8 February 1689/90, transcribed by Halifax from (now lost) notes originally made by him on separate sheets, on 27 folio leaves (written on one side only); imperfect.

Edited from this MS in Foxcroft.

A folio volume comprising two autograph MS works by Halifax, bound together, i + 48 leaves, mounted on guards, in modern dark green morocco gilt.

Volume LXVII of the archives of the Earl Spencer, of Althorp, Northamptonshire. Formerly Althorp Papers, C9 (1-2).

HaG 62

Transcript of Halifax's conversations with William III between 30 December 1688 and 8 February 1689/90 in the hand of Miss Rachel Lloyd (d.1803), apparently transcribed (at least in part) from Halifax's (now lost) original notes, here headed Memorandoms of Conversations that pass'd between King William, and George Marquiss of Hallifax, who was made Lord Privy Seal, by King Wiliam at the Revolution. They were wrote by that Lord upon loose sheets of paper most of them with dates, some without, 93 large quarto leaves on rectos only (plus numerous blanks), in contemporary green vellum.

c.1800

Volume LXXII of the archives of the Earl Spencer, of Althorp, Northamptonshire. Formerly Althorp Papers F163. (C14).

Edited in part from this MS (A) in Foxcroft.

HaG 63

Transcript of Halifax's conversations with William III.

Transcript of Halifax's conversations with William III between 30 December 1688 and ?23 May 1690 in the hand of Miss Rachel Lloyd, apparently transcribed (at least in part) from Halifax's (now lost) original notes, here headed Memorandoms of Conversations between King William and George Marquiss of Hallifax, wrote down by that Lord upon loose sheets of paper, some with dates, and some with none. Correctly copied, To which are added some explanatory Notes by the Transcriber, 94 small quarto leaves, on rectos only (plus numerous blanks), in brown half-calf.

c.1800

Volume LXXIII of the archives of the Earl Spencer, of Althorp, Northamptonshire. Formerly Althorp Papers F164 (C15).

Edited in part from this MS (B) in Foxcroft.

Miscellanies
HaG 63.5

A formal quarto commonplace book, alphabetically arranged, in a neat rounded hand, iv + 76 leaves (plus numerous blanks), in contemporary black leather.

Ascribed, in affixed early 19th-century notes, to George Savile, Marquess of Halifax, but it is not in his hand.

Late 17th century

Bookplate of the Hon. Charles James Fox (1749-1806), politician. Given to Sir James Mackintosh (1765-1832), political writer, and afterwards presented to Lady Holland. Now Volume CXIV of the Holland House Papers.

*HaG 64
Autograph

Autograph draft historical notes, comprising an index of royal proclamations issued between 1660 and 1690, alphabetically arranged (in the form of a commonplace book), on 64 folio leaves (plus blanks); together with autograph notes on Samuel Barnardiston's case, partly in double columns, on two folio leaves (adjoining two blank leaves, one dated 27 May 1689).

A folio composite volume of political and historical MSS, 585 leaves, in contemporary calf (rebacked).

Once owned by John Anstis (1669-1744), Garter King of Arms, who has supplied an index. Later owned by Sir Thomas Phillipps (1792-1872) (his MS 3612). Sotheby's, 6 [or 9?] June 1898 (Phillipps sale), lot 623. Given to the Bodleian by F.J. Varley in February 1948.

Bodleian Library, Eng. hist. MSS (MS Eng. hist. c. 304 ff. 10r-73v, 349r-50v)
*HaG 65
Autograph

A collection of partly autograph notes and papers of Halifax, in various hands and paper sizes, on unnumbered loose sheets, in 44 folders.

Including a note concerning news from Spain (one small slip); ([9]) autograph notes concerning the capture of James II at Faversham, c.12 December 1688 (one folio leaf); minutes of the meeting of the Lords at Windsor, 17 December 1688 (two quarto pages); and ([5]) notes at the debates of the Lords, 24 December 1688 (two folio pages). Also including ([3]) three pairs of conjugate quarto leaves containing, in the hand of Halifax's secretary Alexander Sion, a titke-page Saviliana / or / The Works/of / George Savile / Late Marquis of Halifax / In four Tracts / The Character of a Trimmer / A Letter to a Dissenter / The Anatomy of an Equivalent / and / Advice to a Daughter, and Some account of the following papers and of their noble Author, Sion's introduction to his intended edition of four of Halifax's tracts.

c.1688-95

Volume LXVI of the papers of the Earl Spencer, of Althorp, Northamptonshire. Formerly Althorp Papers C8.

*HaG 66 c.1688-90s
Autograph

Autograph draft of Transactions at the P. of Oranges first Comeing, written in double columns on three pages of two folio leaves.

Edited from this MS in Foxcroft, II, 57-9.

A folio composite volume of state and heraldic tracts and papers, in various hands, 452 leaves, in modern half crushed morocco on cloth boards gilt.

[1688]
The British Library: Lansdowne MSS (Lansdowne MS 255 ff. 40r-2r)
*HaG 67
Autograph

Autograph octavo notebook, arranged alphabetically in the form of a commonplace book, recording comments on various of Halifax's contemporaries, incidents and conversations, 80 pages (plus blanks).

1688-90

This MS briefly discussed in Foxcroft, I, ix.

The Duke of Devonshire, Chatsworth House (Halifax Box 6, [no item number])
*HaG 67.5
Autograph

An autograph octavo notebook of Court gossip, 1692-4, in contemporary black morocco gilt.

c.1694

Acquired from Maggs Bros in 2007.

The Duke of Devonshire, Chatsworth House (Halifax Papers, [unnumbered])
*HaG 67.8
Autograph

Autograph folio volume, entitled Abregé du Traité de L'Ambassadeur par Wicquefort 1693, in vellum.

A series of extracts in French extrapolated from Abraham van Wicquefort's treatise on diplomacy L'Ambassadeur et ses fonctions (first published at The Hague, 1681), arranged in double columns and with headings in the form of a commonplace book.

1693
The Duke of Devonshire, Chatsworth House (Strongroom, Shelf 1A [no item number])
*HaG 68
Autograph

A collection of drafts, notes and memoranda on political matters, chiefly autograph, some in the hands of amanuenses (including Halifax's brother Henry Savile), including draft speeches (or abstracts of speeches), memoranda relating to the Rye House Plot (1683), notes on Parliamentary, Committee and legal proceedings and examinations and a few miscellaneous observations on political and philosophical matters, written in part in double columns, on over fifty leaves or loose sheets (plus blanks), chiefly folio (some quarto and octavo).

c.1665-95

This collection briefly discussed in Foxcroft, I, ix. Some documents edited by her passim, principally in I, 505-7 (Draught of a Petition &c. the Bishops to K. James, In the year 168[8]; Letters 60.1); II, 95-8 (Reflections by the Marquis of Halifax on the evidence of Mr. Hampden: A14); II, 99-103 (Reflections on the foregoing &c: A12, A13 and A3); II, 105-6 (sketch of Lord Montague: A19); II, 119-22 (Notes of the proceedings in the Murder Committee: A8); II, 122-3 (Notes on Evidence of Forbes: A9); II, 137-40 (speech: A26); II, 155 (Concerning Capel: C24); II, 156-7 (speech: A27); II, 162-4 (speech: A28); II, 253-6 (speech: A22); II, 256-7 (speech: A20); II, 257-64 (Notes on the Life of Bishop Williams: A16); II, 528 (Additional Maxims: A25). Some miscellaneous maxims (A25, A30) edited in Brown, III, 454-5.

The Duke of Devonshire, Chatsworth House (Halifax Collections, Groups A (1-31) and C (24))
*HaG 69
Autograph

An autograph commonplace book, containing observations on political, historical, legal, philosophical and miscellaneous subjects, the entries alphabetically arranged, written chiefly in columns on 37 folio pages (out of a total of 178 pages in the volume, all alphabetically lettered), together with a few loosely inserted leaves of Misc[ellanies], the vellum cover later inscribed (inaccurately) 7. Common Place Book of Daniel. 2nd Lord Nottingham.

Late 17th century

Among papers of the Finch family of Burley-on-the-Hill, Rutland.

Selections from this MS in Brown, III, 310-14.

Leicestershire Record Office (DG. 7/Lit. 5 (Box 4975))
*HaG 70
Autograph

A commonplace book, containing observations by Halifax on political, historical, legal, philosophical and miscellaneous subjects, the entries alphabetically arranged, written chiefly in the hand of Halifax's chaplain and amanuensis Alexander Sion (1654-1730), with some entries in Halifax's own hand, entered in double columns on 220 folio pages (out of 290 pages in the volume), the vellum cover later inscribed 8 Ex. 1785 Miscellanys.

Late 17th century

Among papers of the Finch family of Burley-on-the-Hill, Rutland.

Edited from this MS in Brown, III, 36-310, with a facsimile of the first page facing III, 36.

Leicestershire Record Office (DG. 7/Lit. 6 (Box 4975))
*HaG 71
Autograph

A large unbound collection of autograph notes, memoranda and aphorisms, on historical, political, philosophical and miscellaneous subjects (including HaG 44), many written in two or more columns, on c.400 pages of loose sheets (plus blanks), chiefly folio, a number lettered for subsequent arrangement (Ab:, Ba:, &c.).

Items 128-39 have been missing since 1977.

Late 17th century

Among papers of the Finch family of Burley-on-the-Hill, Rutland.

Most MS pages edited in Brown, under various headings: I, 243-5 and 291; II, 26-68, 72-111, 135-78, 258-332, 407-18, with facsimiles of ff. 33r and 56r facing II, 90 and 180; and III, 25-335, 315-454, with facsimiles of ff. 153r and 83r facing III, 26 and 316.

Photocopies supplied by M.N. Brown are preserved. Facsimile of f. 100r in IELM, II.i (1987), Facsimile XXI, after p. xxiv.

Leicestershire Record Office (DG. 7/Lit. 7/1-171, 175 (Box 4975))
Political, Moral and Miscellaneous Thoughts and Reflections

Foxcroft, II, 489-528.

See HaG 64-71 and Introduction.

Saviliana

An account of Halifax by Alexander Sion under the title Saviliana/or/The Works/of/George Savile/Late Marquis of Halifax/In four Tracts/The Character of a Trimmer/A Letter to a Dissenter/The Anatomy of an Equivalent/and/Advice to a Daughter, evidently intended as an introduction to a posthumous edition of four of Halifax's tracts which did not materialize.

HaG 72

Written on ten quarto pages by Halifax's amanuensis Alexander Sion (1654-1730), a Huguenot refugee whom Halifax appointed as his domestic chaplain some time after 23 October 1690 and whom he presented to the rectory of Barrowby in Lincolnshire in 1693.

Formerly Althorp Papers, C6 (2).

The text has been edited (albeit piecemeal) in Foxcroft (see I, xiv, for full page references), and see Foxcroft, I, xii-xiv; Brown, HLQ (1972); and David Wykes, The Marquis of Halifax and his Man of Letters: Facts and Problems, N & Q, 218 (May 1973), 171-5.

Documents

Will
*HaG 73
Autograph

Halifax's last will and testament signed by him, proved 17 April 1695.

1695
National Archives, Kew (PROB 10/1265)
HaG 74

A registered copy of Halifax's last will and testament, proved 17 April 1695.

1695

Edited in Foxcroft, II, 264-6.

National Archives, Kew (PROB 11/424-9)