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Mr. CONGREVE's Laſt Will and Teſtament, WITH CHARACTERS OF HIS WRITINGS.

BY Mr. DRYDEN, Sir RICHARD BLACKMORE, Mr. ADDISON and Major PACK.

To which are added, Two Pieces, viz.

LONDON: Printed for E. CURLL in the Strand, 1729. (Price One Shilling.)

A TRUE COPY OF THE Laſt Will and Teſtament of William Congreve, Eſq

[1]

E' Regiſtro Curiae Praerogat. Cantuar. Extract.

In the Name of God, Amen.

THIS is the laſt Will of me William Congreve, of the Pariſh of St. Clement-Danes, Weſtminſter, in the County of Middleſex, Eſq made [2] the twenty-ſixth Day of February, Anno Dom. 1725; And firſt I deſire, and direct, that my Funeral ſhall be privately performed, without the leaſt Oſtentation, and the Place where, I refer to my Executor to appoint.

I give to the ſeveral Perſons herein after named, the reſpective Legacies following (that is to ſay) To * * * * * * * * * ** my Intention is, that the following Legacies be given to the reſpective Perſons herein named, as if they were inſerted in the blank Space left in this Will for that purpoſe.

IMPRIMIS, I give and bequeath to Anne Jellet, twenty Pounds a Year during her Life.

[3] Item, To William Congreve, Son of Colonel William Congreve of Highgate, and my Godſon, three hundred Pounds.

To Mrs. Anne Congreve, Daughter to my late Kinſman Colonel Ralph Congreve of Clarges-ſtreet, two hundred Pounds.

To Mrs. Anne Bracegirdle, of Howard-ſtreet, two hundred Pounds.

To Mrs. Francis Porter, fifty Pounds.

Item, To Mrs. Deborah Rooke, one hundred Pounds, with all my Linnen and Apparel; for other leſs Legacies, I leave them as ſpecified in a Codicil incloſed in the Duplicate of this Will, and left in the Cuſtody of the Dutcheſs of Marlborough * * * * * * **

[4] ALL the Reſt and Reſidue of my Eſtate, the ſame conſiſting in perſonal Things only (not having any Lands, or other real Eſtate) I give and bequeath to the Dutcheſs of Marlborough, the now Wife of Francis Earl of Godolphin in the County of Cornwall; but not ſo as to veſt in him the ſaid Earl of Godolphin, the equitable Right and Intereſt of ſuch Reſt and Reſidue, but that the ſame and every Part thereof; and the Intereſt, Produce, and Benefit thereof; ſhall and may, at all times, from and after my Deceaſe, be had and received by her the ſaid Dutcheſs, namely, Henrietta, Dutcheſs of Marlborough, to her ſole and ſeparate Uſe, and wherewith her ſaid Husband, or any after-taken Huſband, of her the ſaid Dutcheſs of Marlborough, ſhall not intermeddle, or have [5] any controuling Power over, nor ſhall the ſaid Reſt and Reſidue, or the Intereſt and Produce thereof, be liable to the Debts and Incumbrances of the ſaid Earl of Godolphin, or of any after-taken Husband, of her the ſaid Dutcheſs of Marlborough, in any wiſe; but ſhall be had and received, iſſued and paid, as ſhe the ſaid Dutcheſs of Marlborough, ſhall by writing under her Hand, from time to time direct and appoint; and her own Acquittance ſhall be a ſufficient diſcharge for all, or any Part of the Eſtate ſo given to her as aforeſaid. And in Confidence of the Honeſty and Juſtice of him the ſaid Francis Earl of Godolphin, I do hereby conſtitute and appoint him, the ſole Executor of this my Will, in Truſt, for his ſaid Wife, as aforeſaid. [6] In Witneſs whereof, I have hereunto ſubſcribed my Name, and ſet my Seal, the Day and Year aforeſaid.

William Congreve (L. S.)
Signed, ſealed, and declared by the, ſaid William Congreve Teſtator, to be his laſt Will, in the Preſence of Us,
  • TIMO. KIPLIN,
  • THOMAS SWAN.

THE Duplicate WILL and CODICIL.

[7]
In the Name of God, Amen.

THIS is the laſt Will of me William Congreve, of the Pariſh of St. Clement-Danes, Weſtminſter, in the County of Middleſex, Eſq made the twenty-ſixth of February, Anno Dom. 1725. And firſt I deſire and direct, that my Funeral ſhall be privately performed without the leaſt Oſtentation, and the Place where, I refer to my Executor to appoint. I give to the ſeveral Perſons herein after-named, the reſpective Legacies following (that is to ſay) To * * * * * * * * **

[8] Legacies intended to be inſerted in the blank Space of this Will, and which I deſire may be paid, tho' any Thing ſhould prevent my inſerting them with my own Hand, in Manner as I have filled up the other Blanks in the ſame.

IMPRIMIS, To Anne Jellet, twenty Pounds a Year for her Life.

Item, To my Godſon William Congreve, Son of Colonel William Congreve of Highgate, three hundred Pounds.

Item, To Anne Congreve, Daughter of the late Colonel Ralph Congreve of Clarges-ſtreet, two hundred Pounds.

[9] Item, To Mrs. Anne Congreve, Her Mother, and to Colonel William Congreve of Highgate, each twenty Pounds.

Item, To Mrs. Anne Bracegirdle of Howard-ſtreet, two hundred Pounds.

Item, To Mrs. Deborah Rook, one hundred Pounds, and all my wearing Apparel and Linnen of all Sorts.

Item, To Mrs. Francis Porter, fifty Pounds.

Item, To Peter Walter, Eſq of St. Margaret Weſtminſter, twenty Pounds.

Item, To Richard Lord Viſcount Cobham, and Richard Lord Viſcount Shannon, twenty Pounds each.

Item, To Charles Mein, Eſq and Mr. [10] Edward Porter, and Mr. Joſhua White, twelve Pounds each.

Item, To her Grace Henrietta Dutcheſs of Newcaſtle, I give and bequeath the Dutcheſs of Marlborough's Picture, by Kneller.

Item, To the Lady Mary Godolphin, youngeſt Daughter to the Dutcheſs of Marlborough, I give and bequeath her Mother's Picture Enamelled, in Miniature, together with my white Brilliant Diamond Ring.

Item, To Colonel Charles Churchill, twenty Pounds, together with my Gold-headed Cane.

Item, To all and each of my Domeſtick Servants, a Year's Wages, and proper Mourning.

[11] Item, To the Poor of the Pariſh, ten Pounds.

ALL the Reſt and Reſidue of my Eſtate, the ſame conſiſting in perſonal Things only (not having any Lands, or other real Eſtate) I give and bequeath to Henrietta, Dutcheſs of Marlborough, the now Wife of Francis Earl of Godolphin in the County of Cornwall; but not ſo as to veſt in him the ſaid Earl of Godolphin, the equitable Right and Intereſt of ſuch Reſt and Reſidue, but that the ſame and every Part thereof; and the Intereſt, Produce, and Benefit thereof; ſhall and may, at all times, from and after my Deceaſe, be had and received by her the ſaid Dutcheſs of Marlborough, to her ſole and ſeparate Uſe, and wherewith her ſaid Husband, or any aftertaken [12] Husband, of her the ſaid Dutcheſs of Marlborough, ſhall not intermeddle, or have any controuling Power over, nor ſhall the ſaid Reſt and Reſidue, or the Intereſt and Produce thereof, be liable to the Debts and Incumbrances of the ſaid Earl of Godolphin, or of any after-taken Husband, of her the ſaid Dutcheſs of Marlborough, in any wiſe; but ſhall be had and received, iſſued and paid, as ſhe the ſaid Dutcheſs of Marlborough, ſhall by writing under her Hand, from time to time direct and appoint; and her own Acquittance ſhall be a ſufficient Diſcharge for all, or any Part of the Eſtate ſo given to her as aforeſaid. And in Confidence of the Honeſty and Juſtice of him the ſaid Francis Earl of Godolphin, I do hereby conſtitute and appoint him, the ſole Executor [13] of this my Will in Truſt, for his ſaid Wife as aforeſaid. In Witneſs whereof, I have hereunto ſubſcribed my Name, and ſet my Seal, the Day and Year aforeſaid.

William Congreve, (L. S.)
Signed, ſealed, and declared by the, ſaid William Congreve the Teſtator, to be his laſt Will, in the Preſence of Us,
  • WILLIAM HUMPSTONE,
  • GEORGE THORPE,
  • JONATHAN WHITE.
[14]

WHEREAS I William Congreve, did by my laſt Will and Teſtament, bearing Date the ſixth Day of February 1725; affix a Schedule of Legacies, written in my own Hand, over a blank Space left for that Purpoſe in the ſaid Will; I do hereby revoke and annual thoſe Legacies, excepting ſuch as are bequeathed to Perſons related to me, and bearing my own Hand; as alſo what is therein bequeathed to Mrs. Anne Jellet, and Mrs. Anne Bracegirdle; which ſaid Legacies, I do hereby confirm, and do hereby revoke and annul, all other Legacies therein mentioned, or in the Counter-part of the ſaid Will, more at large ſet down; which Counter-part is by me left in Cuſtody of her Grace, Henrietta, Dutcheſs of Marlborough, my ſole Executrix, as is ſpecified in the ſaid Will and Counter-part [15] thereof; be it underſtood, that my Intention is by this Writing to revoke thoſe Legacies, not herein confirmed as above-mentioned, in ſuch manner only as to leave them abſolutely in the Power and Determination of the abovenamed Henrietta Dutcheſs of Marlborough, my ſole Executrix, either to pay, or refuſe to pay to them, to take from them, or add to them, as ſhe ſhall judge the Perſons therein named, eſpecially my Domeſtick Servants, therein mentioned, or not mentioned, may have merited of me,

William Congreve, (L. S.)
Signed and ſealed, in Preſence of,
  • JOSEPH LEE.
  • WILLIAM HUMPSTONE.
[16]

PROBATUM Londini cum quatuor Codicillis ſive ſchedulis teſtamentis, annex: tertio Die Menſis Februarij 1728. Coram venli viro Georgio Paul, legum Doctore ſurrog: &c. Jurato prenobilis, & honli viri Franciſci Comitis: de Godolphin, Extris unici, &c. Cui, &c. De bene & Jurat. Lata prius ſententia definitiva pro valore, & validitate dicti teſtamenti prout, ex actis curiae liquet.

LINTHWAITE FARRANT, Regiſtrar: Deputat: Aſſumpt.
[17]

Mr. CONGREVE died about five o'Clock, on Sunday Morning, January the 19th 1728-9, at his Houſe in Surrey-ſtreet in the Strand, in the 57th Year of his Age; and on the Sunday following, January 26th, his Corps lay in State in the Jeruſalem Chamber; from whence, the ſame Evening, between the Hours of Nine and Ten, it was carried, with great Decency and Solemnity, into King HENRY the VIIth's Chapel in Weſtminſter-Abbey, and Interred near the late Earl of Godolphin. The PALL was ſupported by, I. the Duke of Bridgewater. II. Earl of Godolphin. III. Lord Cobham. IV. Lord Wilmington. V. The Honourable George Berkeley, Eſq VI. BrigadierGeneral Churchill. And Colonel Congreve followed the Corps as Chief Mourner.

CHARACTERS OF Mr. CONGREVE.

[18]
IN eaſy Dialogue is FLETCHER's Praiſe:
He mov'd the Soul, but had not Power to raiſe.
Great JOHNSON did by Strength of Judgment pleaſe,
Yet doubling FLETCHER's Force, he wants his Eaſe:
In diff'ring Talents, Both adorn'd their Age;
One for the Study, t'other for the Stage.
But Both to CONGREVE juſtly ſhall ſubmit,
ONE match'd in Judgment, BOTH o'er-match'd in Wit.
In Him, All Beauties of this Age we ſee;
ETHEREGE's Courtſhip, SOUTHERN's Purity;
The Satire, Wit, and Strength, of manly WYCHERLEY.
DRYDEN.

Mr. Addiſon's Character OF THE Old BATCHELOR. *

[19]

IN the Character which gives Name to this Play, there is excellently repreſented the Reluctance of a battered Debaucheé to come into the Trammels of Order and Decency: He neither languiſhes, nor burns, but frets for Love. The Gentlemen of more regular Behaviour, are drawn with much Spirit and Wit; and the Drama introduced by the Dialogue of the firſt Scene, with uncommon, yet natural Converſation. The Part of Fondlewife is a lively Image of the unſeaſonable Fondneſs of Age and Impotence.

Sir Richard Blackmore's CHARACTER OF THE Mourning Bride.*

[20]

THIS Poem has received, and in my Opinion, very juſtly, univerſal Applauſe; being look'd on as the moſt perfect Tragedy that has been wrote in this Age. The Fable, as far as I can judge at firſt Sight, is a very artful and maſterly Contrivance; the Characters are well choſen and well [21] delineated; that of ZARA is admirable. The Paſſions are well touch'd, and skilfully wrought up. The Diction, proper, clear, beautiful, noble, and diverſified agreeably to the Variety of the Subject. Vice, as it ought to be, is puniſh'd; and oppreſſed-Innocence at laſt rewarded. Nature appears very happily imitated (excepting one or two doubtful Inſtances) thro' the whole Piece; in which there are no immodeſt Images or Expreſſions; no wild unnatural Rants, but (ſome Exceptions being allowed) all Things are chaſte, juſt, and decent.

This Tragedy, as I ſaid before, has mightily obtained, and that without the unnatural and fooliſh Mixture of Force and Buffoonery; without ſo much as a Song, or a Dance, to make it [22] more agreeable. By this it appears, that as a ſufficient Genius can recommend itſelf, and furniſh out abundant Matter of Pleaſure and Admiration, without the paultry Helps above named; ſo likewiſe, that the Taſte of the Nation is not ſo far deprav'd, but that a regular and chaſte Play will not only be forgiven, but highly applauded.

Major PACK's SENTIMENTS IN His Eſſay on Study.

[23]

CONGREVE of all the Moderns, ſeems to me, to have the righteſt Turn for Comedy. In all his Plays there is a great deal of lively and uncommon Humour, and ſuch as yet, for the moſt Part, is a Picture of true Life. Beſides, he hath raiſed the Vein of Ridicule, and made the STAGE, which had been too much proſtituted to the Mob, edifying to Perſons of the [24] firſt Condition. And as his Fable is Diverting, ſo is it wrought according to the ſtricteſt Rules.

The following EPISTLE, Of rightly improving the preſent Time, written to Lord Cobham, is here printed from a Manuſcript of the Author, with which I was obliged by a Perſon of the firſt Rank: The Public having been notoriouſly abuſed, by a very erroneous Copy, ſurreptitiouſly obtained, by one LEWIS in Covent-Garden, and vended under the Cover of A. DODD, and E. NUTT.

VERSES To the Right Honourable the Lord Viſcount Cobham.
Of Improving the preſent Time.

[25]
SINCEREST Critic of my Proſe, or Rhime,
Tell how thy pleaſing STOWE employs thy Time.
Say, COBHAM, what amuſes thy Retreat?
Or Stratagems of War, or Schemes of State?
Doſt thou recal to Mind with Joy, or Grief,
Great MARLBRO's Actions? That immortal Chief,
Whoſe ſlighteſt Trophy rais'd in each Campaign,
More than ſuffic'd to ſignalize a Reign?
[26] Does thy Remembrance riſing warm thy Heart,
With Glory paſt, where Thou thy ſelf hadſt Part,
Or doſt thou grieve indignant, now to ſee,
The fruitleſs End of all thy Victory?
To ſee th' Audacious Foe, ſo late ſubdu'd,
Diſpute thoſe Terms for which ſo long they ſu'd,
As if BRITANNIA now were ſunk ſo low,
To beg that PEACE ſhe wonted to beſtow,
Be far that Guilt! be never known that Shame!
That ENGLAND ſhou'd retract her rightful Claim,
Or ceaſing to be dreaded and ador'd,
Stain with her Pen the Luſtre of her Sword.
Or doſt thou give the Winds a-far to blow,
Each vexing-Thought, and Heart-devouring Woe,
And fix thy Mind alone on rural Scenes,
To turn the level'd Lawns to liquid Plains,
To raiſe the creeping Rills from humble Beds,
And force the latent Springs to lift their Heads,
On watry Columns, Capitals to rear,
That mix their flowing Curls with upper Air.
Or doſt Thou, weary grown, theſe Works neglect,
No Temples, Statues, Obelisks erect,
But catch the morning Breeze from fragrant Meads,
Or ſhun the Noon-tide Ray in wholſom Shades,
[27] Or ſlowly walk, along the mazy Wood,
To meditate on all that's wiſe and good,
For Nature bountiful, in Thee has join'd,
A Perſon pleaſing with a worthy Mind,
Not given the Form alone, but Means, and Art,
To draw the Eye, or to allure the Heart.
Poor were the Praiſe in Fortune to excel,
Yet want the Way to uſe that Fortune well.
While thus adorn'd, while thus with Virtue crown'd,
At Home, in Peace; Abroad, in Arms renown'd;
Graceful in Form, and winning in Addreſs,
While well you think, what aptly you expreſs,
With Health, with Honour, with a fair Eſtate,
A Table free, and elegantly neat.
What can be added more to mortal Bliſs?
What can he want that ſtands poſſeſt of This?
What can the fondeſt wiſhing Mother more,
Of Heaven attentive for her Son implore?
And yet a Happineſs remains unknown,
Or to Philoſophy reveal'd alone;
A Precept, which unpractis'd renders vain,
Thy flowing Hopes, and Pleaſure turns to Pain.
Shou'd Hope, and Fear thy Heart alternate tear,
Or Love, or Hate, or Rage, or anxious Care,
[28] Whatever Paſſions may thy Mind infeſt,
(Where is that Mind which Paſſions ne'er moleſt?)
Amidſt the Pangs of ſuch inteſtine Strife,
Still think the PRESENT DAY, the LAST of LIFE;
Defer not till to Morrow to be Wiſe,
To Morrow's SUN, to Thee may never riſe.
Or ſhou'd to Morrow chance to cheer thy Sight,
With her enliv'ning and unlookt-for Light,
How grateful will appear her dawning Rays!
As Favours unexpected doubly pleaſe.
Who thus can think, and who ſuch Thoughts purſues,
Content may keep his Life, or calmly loſe;
All Proofs of this Thou may'ſt thy ſelf receive,
When Leiſure from Affairs will give thee Leave.
Come, ſee thy Friend, retir'd without Regret,
Forgetting Care, or ſtriving to forget;
In eaſy Contemplation ſoothing Time
With Morals much, and now and then with Rhime,
Not ſo robuſt in Body, as in Mind,
And always undejected, tho' declin'd;
Not wond'ring at the World's new wicked Ways,
Compar'd with thoſe of our Fore-fathers Days,
[29] For Virtue now is neither more or leſs,
And Vice is only vary'd in the Dreſs:
Believe it, Men have ever been the ſame,
And Ovid's GOLDEN AGE, is but a Dream.
WILLIAM CONGREVE.

THE TRUE COPY OF AN AFFIDAVIT, Made before one of His Majeſty's Juſtices of the Peace for the City of Weſtminſter.

[30]

THAT four LADIES, whom the Deponent does not care to Name, repair nightly to a certain convenient Place, near St. James's, to meet their GALLANTS of the firſt Rank; whom your Deponent will not Name, but ſo far deſcribe them, that two [31] of them are Sallow, and two of the ruddy Complexion; and that he verily believes, they were moſt abominably painted.

The LADIES when they begin their Gambols, call their GALLANTS by the fond Nick-names of Hercules, Cupid, Pit, and the Gardiner. After a plentiful Service of the moſt coſtly Fare, they begin their Tricks which they play like the Tumblers in Bartholomew-Fair upon a Carpet, ſtrip is the Word; nay, your Deponent has known them ſtrip a Gentleman who came accidently into the Houſe. At firſt, they begin pretty courtly, at leaſt in their Expreſſions, as, Madam, by your leave, or ſo; which the LADIES are ſo good as ſeldom to deny. Afterwards, it is ſhameful to deſcribe the Tricks that are play'd by this lewd Pack. By an eſtabliſhed [32] Rule, each Lady has the Choice of her Gallant in her Turn, and ſome have been known ſo unreaſonable, after they have had Three, to call for a Fourth. Your Deponent has ſeen a Lady on her Back, a Man o'Top of her, and a Lady o'Top of him; and he avers, it has been known, that a Court Valet has ſtript them all. Sometimes they are thrown on their Backs, ſometimes on their Bellies now higgledy piggledy, and anon, they are all o'Top of one another; and if any one is call'd upon, they are oblig'd to ſhow ALL. Of the ſame Nature is their Diſcourſe, your Deponent has often over-heard them talking of their A—es, with the ſame Familiarity as their Faces; I have a Black one, ſays one, and named the Thing directly; mine is better than yours, ſays the other, [33] and Names her Thing; muſt I be laught at, ſays a Third, becauſe I have a red one. There is one monſtrous Thing that your Deponent is almoſt aſhamed to mention; after Six, a Lady has asked if they could do no more; nay, a certain Lady has been known to play all the Tricks over by her ſelf. Your Deponent likewiſe avers, that he has full Proof, after the LADIES have been tired with their GALLANTS, they have called for freſh ones: In ſhort the aforeſaid LADIES, have not only, ſpent their Pin-Money, but their Husband's Eſtates, upon Hercules, Cupid, Pit, and the Gardiner, and when they want more Money, they commonly Pawn their Jewels, &c.

Jurat. Coram me, T. T.
[34]

P.S. The above Information is a faithful Deſcription of the GAME of QUADRILLE, not to be Litterally, but Allegorically, underſtood.

THO. WOOLSTON.

Appendix A

There is now in the Preſs,

MISCELLANEOUS ESSAYS and Familiar Letters. By William Congreve, Eſq To which will be prefix'd, Memoirs of his Life, Writings, and Amours. By Charles Wilſon, Eſq

Appendix B NEW BOOKS Printed for E. Curll in the Strand.

[]
Notes
*
Sic Orig.
*
Sic Orig.
*
Sic Orig.
*
See, The TATLER, No 9.
*
See, His Preface to Prince ARTHUR, Fol. 1697.
The Name of his Lordſhip's SEAT in Buckinghamſhire.
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