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Henry St John, 1st Viscount Bolingbroke

Henry St John, 1st Viscount Bolingbroke (/ˈsɪnɪn ˈbɒlɪŋbrʊk/; 16 September 1678 – 12 December 1751) was an English politician, government official and political philosopher. He was a leader of the Tories, and supported the Church of England politically despite his antireligious views and opposition to theology.[1][2][3][4][5] He supported the Jacobite rebellion of 1715 which sought to overthrow the new king George I. Escaping to France he became foreign minister for James Francis Edward Stuart. He was attainted for treason, but reversed course and was allowed to return to England in 1723. According to Ruth Mack, "Bolingbroke is best known for his party politics, including the ideological history he disseminated in The Craftsman (1726–1735) by adopting the formerly Whig theory of the Ancient Constitution and giving it new life as an anti-Walpole Tory principle."[6]

The Viscount Bolingbroke
Henry St John, 1st Viscount Bolingbroke. Attributed to Alexis Simon Belle, c. 1712 (NPG 593 at the National Portrait Gallery, London).
Secretary of State for the Southern Department
In office
17 August 1713 – 31 August 1714
Monarchs
Preceded byThe Earl of Dartmouth
Succeeded byJames Stanhope
Secretary of State for the Northern Department
In office
21 September 1710 – 17 August 1713
MonarchAnne
Preceded byHenry Boyle
Succeeded byWilliam Bromley
Secretary at War
In office
1704–1708
MonarchAnne
Preceded byGeorge Clarke
Succeeded byRobert Walpole
Jacobite Secretary of State
In office
July 1715 – March 1716
MonarchJames Francis Edward Stuart
Preceded byThomas Higgons
Succeeded byJohn Erskine, Earl of Mar
Personal details
Born
Henry St John

16 September 1678
Battersea, Surrey
England
Died12 December 1751(1751-12-12) (aged 73)
Battersea, London,
Great Britain
Political partyTory
Spouses
  • Frances Winchcombe
  • Marie Claire des Champs
Parents
Alma materChrist Church, Oxford
Signature
Arms of St John: Argent, on a chief gules two mullets or

Early life edit

Henry St John was most probably born at Lydiard Tregoze, the family seat in Wiltshire, and christened in Battersea.[7] St John was the son of Sir Henry St John, 4th Baronet later 1st Viscount St John, and Lady Mary Rich, daughter of the 3rd Earl of Warwick.[8] Although it has been asserted that St John was educated at Eton College and Christ Church, Oxford, his name does not appear on registers for either institution and there is no evidence to support either claim.[9] It is possible he was educated at a Dissenting academy.[10]

He travelled to France, Switzerland and Italy during 1698 and 1699 and acquired an exceptional knowledge of French.[8] St John made friends with the Whigs James Stanhope and Edward Hopkins and corresponded with the Tory Sir William Trumball, who advised him: "There appears indeed amongst us [in England] a strong disposition to liberty, but neither honesty nor virtue enough to support it".

Oliver Goldsmith reported that he had been seen to "run naked through the park in a state of intoxication". Jonathan Swift, his intimate friend, said that he wanted to be thought the Alcibiades or Petronius of his age, and to mix licentious orgies with the highest political responsibilities. In 1700, he married Frances, daughter of Sir Henry Winchcombe of Bucklebury, Berkshire, but this made little difference to his lifestyle.[8]

Early career edit

He became a Member of Parliament in 1701, representing the family borough of Wootton Bassett in Wiltshire, as a Tory. His seat was Lydiard Park at Lydiard Tregoze, now in the Borough of Swindon. He attached himself to Robert Harley (afterwards Lord Oxford), then Speaker of the House of Commons, and distinguished himself by his eloquence in debate, eclipsing his schoolfellow, Robert Walpole, and gaining an extraordinary ascendancy over the House of Commons. In May, he had charge of the bill for securing the Protestant succession; he took part in the impeachment of the Whig lords for their conduct concerning the Partition treaties, and opposed the oath of loyalty against the "Old Pretender". In March 1702, he was chosen commissioner for taking the public accounts.[8]

After Queen Anne's accession, St John supported the bills in 1702 and 1704 against occasional conformity, and took a leading part in the disputes which arose between the two Houses. In 1704, St John took office with Harley as secretary at war, thus being brought into intimate relations with John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough, by whom he was treated with favour. In 1708, he left office with Harley on the failure of the latter's intrigue, and retired to the country till 1710, when he became a privy counsellor and secretary of state in Harley's new ministry, representing Berkshire in parliament. He supported the bill for requiring a real property qualification for a seat in parliament. In 1711 he founded the Brothers' Club, a society of Tory politicians and men of letters, and the same year witnessed the failure of the two expeditions to the West Indies and to Canada promoted by him. In 1712, he was the author of the bill taxing newspapers.[11]

The refusal of the Whigs to make peace with France in 1706, and again in 1709 when Louis XIV offered to yield every point for which the allies professed to be fighting,[citation needed] showed that the war was not being continued in the national interest, and the queen, Parliament and the people supported the ministry in its wish to terminate hostilities. Because of the diversity of aims among the allies, St John was induced to enter into separate and secret negotiations with France for the security of English interests. In May 1712, he ordered the Duke of Ormonde, who had succeeded Marlborough in command, to refrain from any further engagement. These instructions were communicated to the French, though not to the allies, Louis putting Dunkirk as security into possession of England, and the English troops deserted their allies almost on the battlefield. Subsequently, St John received the congratulations of the French foreign minister, de Torcy, on the French victory over Prince Eugene at Denain (24 July 1712).[12]

 
Bolingbroke pictured alongside the earl of Oxford, together with a portrait of Francis Atterbury. Engraving after a painting by Sir Godfrey Kneller.

In June 1712, St John's commercial treaty with France, establishing free trade with that country, was rejected by the House of Commons.[12] The treaty was presented in the Commons by Arthur Moore as St John had been created Viscount Bolingbroke earlier that year. A major campaign was waged against its approval under the slogan "No Peace Without Spain". At least 40 from the Tories voted to reject the treaty.[13] In August 1712, Bolingbroke went to France and signed an armistice between England and France for four months. Finally, the Treaty of Utrecht was signed in March 1713 by all the allies except the emperor. The first production of Addison's Cato was made by the Whigs the occasion of a great demonstration of indignation against the peace, and by Bolingbroke for presenting the actor Barton Booth with a purse of fifty guineas for "defending the cause of liberty against a perpetual dictator".[12]

Meanwhile, the friendship between Bolingbroke and Harley, the basis of the whole Tory administration, had been gradually dissolved. In March 1711, when the Marquis de Guiscard made an attempt on Harley's life, Bolingbroke assumed temporary leadership of the ministry's affairs. His difficulty in controlling the Tory back-benchers, however, only made Harley's absence the more noticeable. In May, Harley obtained the earldom of Oxford and became lord treasurer, while in July, St John was greatly disappointed at receiving only his viscountcy instead of the earldom lately extinct in his family, and at being passed over for the Order of the Garter.[12]

In September 1713 Jonathan Swift came to London and made a final vain attempt to reconcile his two friends. But now a further cause of difference had arisen. The queen's health was visibly breaking, and the Tory ministers anticipated their downfall on the accession of the Elector of Hanover.[citation needed] During Bolingbroke's diplomatic mission to France he had incurred blame for remaining at the opera while the Pretender was present, and according to the Mackintosh transcripts he had several secret interviews with him. Regular communications were kept up subsequently.[12]

In March 1714, Herville, the French envoy in London, sent to de Torcy, the French foreign minister, the substance of two long conversations with Bolingbroke in which the latter advised patience till after the accession of George I, when a great reaction was to be expected in favour of the Pretender. At the same time, he spoke of the treachery of Marlborough and Berwick, and of one Other (presumably Oxford) whom he refused to name, all of whom were in communication with Hanover. Both Oxford and Bolingbroke warned James Stuart that he could have little chance of success unless he changed his religion, but the latter's refusal does not appear to have stopped the communications.[12]

Bolingbroke gradually superseded Oxford in the leadership. Lady Masham, the queen's favourite, quarrelled with Oxford and identified herself with Bolingbroke's interests. The harsh treatment of the Hanoverian demands was inspired by him, and won favour with the queen, while Oxford's influence declined; and by his support of the Schism Bill in May 1714, an aggressive Tory measure forbidding all education by dissenters by making an episcopal licence obligatory for schoolmasters, he probably intended to compel Oxford to give up the game. Finally, a charge of corruption brought by Oxford in July against Bolingbroke and Lady Masham, in connexion with the commercial treaty with Spain, failed, and the lord treasurer was dismissed or retired on 27 July 1714. The Queen died four days later, after appointing Shrewsbury to the lord treasurership.[12]

 
Henry St John, Viscount Bolingbroke

Exile edit

On the accession of George I the illuminations and bonfire at Lord Bolingbroke's house in Golden Square were "particularly fine and remarkable", but he was immediately dismissed from office.[12] The new king had been close to the Whigs but he was willing to bring in Tories. The Tories however refused to serve and gambled everything on an election, which they lost. The triumphant Whigs systematically removed the Tories from most of the posts nationally and regionally.[citation needed]

Bolingbroke followed an erratic course that baffled his contemporaries and historians.[citation needed] He retired to Bucklebury and is said[by whom?] to have now written the answer to the Secret History of the White Staff accusing him of being a Jacobite. In March 1715, he in vain attempted to defend the late ministry in the new parliament; and on the announcement of Walpole's intended attack upon the authors of the Treaty of Utrecht he gave up.[12]

Attainder of Viscount Bolingbroke Act 1714
Act of Parliament
 
Long titleAn act for the attainder of Henry viscount Bolingbroke of high treason, unless he shall render himself to justice by a day certain therein mentioned.
Citation1 Geo. 1. St. 2. c. 16
Dates
Royal assent20 August 1715

Bolingbroke fled in disguise to Paris—a major blunder. In an even greater blunder he joined the Pretender, was made Earl of Bolingbroke in the Jacobite Peerage, and took charge of foreign affairs in the Stuart court. The uprising of 1715 was badly botched and the death of Louis XIV meant the Pretender had lost his major sponsor; King Louis XV wanted peace with Britain and refused to endorse any further schemes. In March 1716, Bolingbroke switched sides again. He had lost his titles and property when Parliament voted a bill of attainder for treason (1 Geo. 1. St. 2. c. 16). He hoped to recover the good graces of King George, and indeed managed to do so in a few years.[14]

He wrote his Reflexions upon Exile, and in 1717, his letter to Sir William Wyndham in explanation of his position, generally considered one of his finest compositions, but not published till 1753 after his death. The same year, he formed a liaison with a widow Marie Claire Deschamps de Marcilly, whom he married in 1720, two years after his first wife's death. He bought and resided at the estate of La Source near Orléans, studied philosophy, criticized the chronology of the Bible, and was visited amongst others by Voltaire, who expressed unbounded admiration for his learning and politeness.[15]

 
Henry St John, 1st Viscount Bolingbroke. Attributed to Charles Jervas.

Pardon and return edit

 
Engraving showing Dawley House, before Saint John's improvements.
Henry St John Bolingbroke Restitution Act 1724
Act of Parliament
 
Long titleAn Act for enabling Henry St. John late Viscount Bolingbroke, and the Heirs Male of his Body, notwithstanding his Attainder, to take and enjoy several Manors, Lands, and Hereditaments, in the Counties of Wilts, Surrey, and Middlesex, according to such Estates and Interests as to him or them are limited thereof by the Quinquepartite Indenture and other Assurances therein mentioned; and for limiting the same, in Default of Issue Male of the Body of the said late Viscount Bolingbroke, to the other Sons of Henry Viscount St. John successively in Tail Male; and for other Purposes therein expressed.
Citation11 Geo. 1. c. 40
Dates
Royal assent31 May 1725

In 1723, through the medium of the king's mistress, Ehrengard Melusine von der Schulenburg, Duchess of Kendal and Munster, he received a pardon and returned to London.[16] Walpole reluctantly accepted his return. In 1725, Parliament enabled him to hold real estate but without power of alienating it. But this had been effected in consequence of a peremptory order of the king, against Walpole's wishes, who succeeded in maintaining his exclusion from the House of Lords. He now bought an estate at Dawley, near Uxbridge, where he renewed his intimacy with Pope, Swift and Voltaire, took part in Pope's literary squabbles, and wrote the philosophy for Pope's An Essay on Man (1734),[15] which, at Epistle I, begins: "To Henry St. John, Lord Bolingbroke:

Awake, my St. John! leave all meaner things
To low ambition, and the pride of kings.
Let us (since life can little more supply
Than just to look about us and to die)
Expatiate free o'er all this scene of man;
A mighty maze! but not without a plan;

On the first occasion which offered itself, that of Pulteney's rupture with Walpole in 1726, he endeavoured to organize an opposition in conjunction with the former and Wyndham; and in 1727, began his celebrated series of letters to The Craftsman, attacking the Walpoles, signed "an Occasional Writer". He won over the Duchess of Kendal with a bribe of £11,000 from his wife's estates, and with Walpole's approval obtained an audience with the king. His success was imminent, and it was thought his appointment as chief minister was assured. In Walpole's own words, "as St John had the duchess entirely on his side I need not add what must or might in time have been the consequence", and he prepared for his dismissal. But once more Bolingbroke's "fortune turned rotten at the very moment it grew ripe", and his projects and hopes were ruined by the king's death in June.[15]

 
Henry St John retired in June 1735.

He wrote additional essays signed "John Trot" that appeared in the Craftsman in 1728, and in 1730 followed Remarks on the History of England by Humphrey Oldcastle, attacking Walpole's policy. Comment prompted by Bolingbroke was continued in the House of Commons by Wyndham, and great efforts were made to establish the alliance between the Tories and the Opposition Whigs. The Excise Bill in 1733 and the Septennial Bill in 1734 offered opportunities for further attacks on the government, which Bolingbroke supported by a new series of papers in the Craftsman styled "A Dissertation on Parties"; but the whole movement collapsed after the new elections, which returned Walpole to power in 1735 with a large majority.[15]

Bolingbroke retired baffled and disappointed from the fray to France in June, residing principally at the château of Argeville near Fontainebleau. He now wrote his Letters on the Study of History (printed privately before his death and published in 1752), and the True Use of Retirement. In 1738, he visited England, became one of the leading friends and advisers of Frederick, Prince of Wales, who now headed the opposition, and wrote for the occasion The Patriot King, which together with a previous essay, The Spirit of Patriotism, and The State of Parties at the Accession of George I, were entrusted to Pope and not published. Having failed, however, to obtain any share in politics, he returned to France in 1739, and subsequently sold Dawley. In 1742 and 1743, he again visited England and quarrelled with Warburton. In 1744, he settled finally at Battersea with his friend Hugh Hume, 3rd Earl of Marchmont, and was present at Pope's death in May. The discovery that the poet had printed secretly 1,500 copies of The Patriot King, caused him to publish a correct version in 1749, and stirred up a further altercation with Warburton, who defended his friend against Bolingbroke's bitter aspersions, the latter, whose conduct was generally reprehended, publishing a Familiar Epistle to the most Impudent Man Living.[15]

 
Henry St John, Viscount Bolingbroke and his second wife Mary Clara des Champs de Marcilly monument in St Mary's Church, Battersea - both epitaphs were written by Henry himself

Death edit

In 1744, he had been very busy assisting in the negotiations for the establishment of the new "broad bottom" administration, and showed no sympathy for the Jacobite expedition in 1745. He recommended the tutor for Prince George, afterwards George III. About 1749, he wrote the Present State of the Nation, an unfinished pamphlet. Philip Stanhope, 4th Earl of Chesterfield records the last words heard from him: "God who placed me here will do what He pleases with me hereafter and He knows best what to do". He died on 12 December 1751, aged 73, his second wife having predeceased him by one year. They were both buried in St Mary's, the parish church at Battersea, where a monument with medallions and inscriptions composed by Bolingbroke was erected to their memory.[15] The monument was sculpted by Roubiliac.[17]

He was succeeded in the title as 2nd Viscount Bolingbroke, according to the special remainder, by his half-nephew Frederick St John, 3rd Viscount St John (a title granted to Bolingbroke's father in 1716), from whom the title has descended.[18] Frederick was the son of the 1st Viscount's half-brother John St John, by his father's second wife Angelica Magdalena Pelissary.

Impact edit

 
Portrait of Henry St John attributed to Jonathan Richardson

Bolingbroke, Georgia, was named after him.

Republicanism in America edit

In the late 20th century, Bolingbroke was rediscovered by historians as a major influence on Voltaire, and on the American patriots John Adams, Thomas Jefferson and James Madison. Adams said that he had read all of Bolingbroke's works at least five times; indeed, Bolingbroke's works were widely read in the American colonies, where they helped provide the foundation for the emerging nation's devotion to republicanism. His vision of history as cycles of birth, growth, decline and death of a republic was influential in the colonies,[19] as was his contention on liberty: that one is "free not from the law, but by the law".[20]

Influence in Britain edit

Bute and George III derived their political ideas from The Patriot King.[21] Edmund Burke wrote his Vindication of Natural Society in imitation of Bolingbroke's style, but in refutation of his principles; and in the Reflections on the French Revolution he exclaims, "Who now reads Bolingbroke, who ever read him through?" Burke denied that Bolingbroke's words left "any permanent impression on his mind".[15] Benjamin Disraeli lionized Bolingbroke as the "Founder of Modern Toryism", eradicating its "absurd and odious doctrines", and establishing its mission to subvert "Whig attempts to transform the English Constitution into an oligarchy".[22]

The loss of Bolingbroke's great speeches was regretted by William Pitt more than that of the missing books of Livy and Tacitus. By the early 20th century, the writings and career of Bolingbroke would make a weaker impression than they made on contemporaries. He was thought by the author in his biography in A Short Biographical Dictionary of English (1910) to be a man of brilliant and versatile talents, but selfish, insincere and intriguing, defects of character which arguably led to his political ruin; and his writings were described as glittering, artificial and lacking philosophical merit.[23] Philip Chesney Yorke, his biographer in the Encyclopædia Britannica 11th Edition, commented that his abilities were exercised upon ephemeral objects, and not inspired by lasting or universal ideas.[15]

Enlightenment philosophy edit

Bolingbroke held certain views of opposition to church and theological teachings[1] that may have had influence during the Age of Enlightenment. The atheist antireligious French-German philosopher Baron d'Holbach quotes Bolingbroke in his political work Good Sense, in reference to Bolingbroke's statements against religion.[2]

Country Party edit

Bolingbroke was especially influential in stating the need and outlining the machinery of a systematic parliamentary opposition. Such an opposition he called a "country party" which he opposed to the court party. Country parties had been formed before, for instance after the king's speech to Parliament in November 1685, but Bolingbroke was the first to state the need for a continual opposition to the government. To his mind the spirit of liberty was threatened by the court party's lust for power.[24]

Liberty could only be safeguarded by an opposition party that used "constitutional methods and a legal course of opposition to the excesses of legal and ministerial power" (On the Idea of a Patriot King p. 117). He instructed the opposition party to "Wrest the power of government, if you can, out of the hands that employed it weakly and wickedly" (On the Spirit of Patriotism p. 42). This work could be done only by a homogeneous party "because such a party alone will submit to a drudgery of this kind" (On the idea of a Patriot King p. 170). It was not enough to be eager to speak, keen to act. "They who affect to head an opposition ... must be equal, at least, to those whom they oppose" (On the Spirit of Patriotism p. 58). The opposition had to be of a permanent nature to make sure that it would be looked at as a part of daily politics. It had on every occasion to confront the government (On the Spirit of Patriotism p. 61). He considered a party that systematically opposed the government to be more appealing than a party that did so occasionally (On the Spirit of Patriotism pp. 62, 63). This opposition had to prepare itself to control government (On the Spirit of Patriotism p. 61).

Works edit

  • Lashmore-Davies, Adrian C., ed. "The Correspondence of Henry St. John and Sir William Trumbull, 1698–1710", Eighteenth-Century Life 32, no. 3 (2008), pp. 23–179.
  • Parke, G., ed. The Letters and Correspondence of Henry St John, Lord Viscount Bolingbroke. 4 vols. 1798.
  • Dickinson, H. T., ed. "The Letters of Henry St. John to the Earl of Orrery, 1709–1711" Camden Miscellany, vol. XXVI. Camden Fourth Series. Volume 14 (London: The Royal Historical Society, 1975), pp. 137–199.
  • H. T. Dickinson (ed.). "Letters of Bolingbroke to the Earl of Orrery, 1712–13", Camden Miscellany, Vol. XXXI. Camden Fourth Series. Volume 44 (London: The Royal Historical Society, 1992), pp. 349–371.
  • The works of the late Right Honourable Henry St. John, Lord Viscount Bolingbroke, new ed., Vol. 1 (London, 1809).
  • The works of the late Right Honourable Henry St. John, Lord Viscount Bolingbroke, new ed., Vol. 2 (London, 1809).
  • The works of the late Right Honourable Henry St. John, Lord Viscount Bolingbroke, new ed., Vol. 3 (London, 1809).
  • The works of the late Right Honourable Henry St. John, Lord Viscount Bolingbroke, new ed., Vol. 4 (London, 1809).
  • The works of the late Right Honourable Henry St. John, Lord Viscount Bolingbroke, new ed., Vol. 5 (London, 1809).
  • The works of the late Right Honourable Henry St. John, Lord Viscount Bolingbroke, new ed., Vol. 6 (London, 1809).
  • The works of the late Right Honourable Henry St. John, Lord Viscount Bolingbroke, new ed., Vol. 7 (London, 1809).
  • The works of the late Right Honourable Henry St. John, Lord Viscount Bolingbroke, new ed., Vol. 8 (London, 1809).
  • The Works of Lord Bolingbroke, Vol 1. University Press of the Pacific, 2001. ISBN 0-89875-352-X
  • Armitage, David, ed. Bolingbroke: Political Writings (Cambridge Texts in the History of Political Thought). Cambridge University Press, 1997. ISBN 0-521-58697-6
  • The Philosophical Works of the Late Right Honourable Henry St John, Lord Viscount Bolingbroke, 3 vol. 1776, reprint 2005. ISBN 1-4212-0061-9
  • Jackman, S. W., ed. The Idea of a Patriot King. Indianapolis, 1965.
  • The Works of the Late Right Honorable Henry St. John, Lord Viscount Bolingbroke was first published in March 1754 in five quarto volumes, and it was made popular by its controversial outlooks on religion. A decade later, the highly successful London bookseller Andrew Millar was still selling the Works for a considerable fortune, setting the price at three guineas (three pounds and three shillings), a clear indication of the importance and value of the text. In a letter to Dr. Cadell in July 1765, Millar wrote "I never sold a Bolingbroke in quarto under 3 guineas ... Wren paid so and I can't now alter the price".[25]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b See e.g., Henry St. John Viscount Bolingbroke, "Letters or Essays Addressed to Alexander Pope: Introduction", The Works of Lord Bolingbroke: With a Life, Prepared Expressly for This Edition, Containing Additional Information Relative to His Personal and Public Character, (Philadelphia: Carey and Hart, 1841) Vol 3, pp. 40–64. Also available on Project Gutenberg as "Letter to Alexander Pope" in Letters to Sir William Windham and Mr. Pope.
  2. ^ a b D'Holbach, Baron. Good Sense paragraph 206
  3. ^ The philosophical works of Lord Bolingbroke Volume 2, p. 287
  4. ^ Allen, Brooke, Moral Minority p. 75
  5. ^ Voltaire, God and Human Beings pp. 64, 80, 104
  6. ^ Ruth Mack (2009). Literary Historicity: Literature and Historical Experience in Eighteenth-century Britain. Stanford UP. p. 8. ISBN 9780804759113.
  7. ^ H. T. Dickinson, Bolingbroke (London: Constable, 1970), p. 2.
  8. ^ a b c d Yorke 1911, p. 161.
  9. ^ Dickinson, pp. 2–3.
  10. ^ Dickinson, pp. 3–4.
  11. ^ Yorke 1911, pp. 161–162.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i Yorke 1911, pp. 162.
  13. ^ Alimento, Antonella. War Trade and Neutrality Europe and the Mediterranean in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. FrancoAngeli.
  14. ^ Yorke 1911, pp. 162–163.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h Yorke 1911, pp. 163.
  16. ^ Lecky, William Edward Harpole (1888). "Volume I, Chapter III". History of England in the XVIIIth Century (With 1877 preface) (first ed.). New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1,3, and 5 Bond Street. p. 343.
  17. ^ Dictionary of British Sculptors 1660-1851 by Rupert Gunnis p.331
  18. ^ Yorke 1911, pp. 164.
  19. ^ Garrett Sheldon, Encyclopedia of Political Thought (2001) p. 36
  20. ^ Martin van Gelderen and Quentin Skinner, eds. Republicanism: Republicanism and Constitutionalism in Early Modern Europe (2002) p. 41
  21. ^ Durant, Will and Ariel (1965). The Age of Voltaire. New York: Simon and Schuster. p. 100.
  22. ^ Disraeli, Benjamin (1914). Whigs and Whiggism: political writings. Macmillan. pp. 218–220.
  23. ^ Cousin 1910, p. 41.
  24. ^ Caroline Robbins, "'Discordant Parties': A Study of the Acceptance of Party by Englishmen", Political Science Quarterly Vol. 73, No. 4 (Dec. 1958), pp. 505–529 in JSTOR
  25. ^ "The manuscripts, Letter from Andrew Millar to Dr. Cadell, July 16,1765. See footnote 27". millar-project.ed.ac.uk. Retrieved 1 June 2016.

Further reading edit

  • Biddle, Sheila. Bolingbroke and Harley (Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., 1974).
  • Dickinson, H. T. "St John, Henry, styled first Viscount Bolingbroke (1678–1751)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, September 2013, accessed 18 October 2017, short scholarly biography
  • Dickinson, Harry Thomas. Bolingbroke (1970), scholarly biography.
  • Kramnick, Isaac. Bolingbroke and his circle: the politics of nostalgia in the age of Walpole (Cornell University Press, 1992).
  • Mansfield, Harvey C. Statesmanship and party government: A study of Burke and Bolingbroke (University of Chicago Press, 2012).
  • West, Chris. "Bolingbroke, Henry St. John, 1st Viscount (1678–1751)" in The Encyclopedia of Political Thought (2015).

References edit

Primary sources edit

  • The works of Lord Bolingbroke, 4 vols. (1969)
  • H. St John, Viscount Bolingbroke, The idea of a patriot king, ed. S. W. Jackman (Indianapolis, 1965)
  • Lord Bolingbroke: historical writings, ed. I. Kramnick (Chicago, 1972)
  • Lord Bolingbroke: contributions to The Craftsman, ed. S. Varey (1982)
  • Bolingbroke: political writings, ed. D. Armitage (1997)
  • Bolingbroke's political writings: the conservative Enlightenment, ed. B. Cottret (1997)

External links edit

Parliament of England
Preceded by
Henry Pinnell
Henry St John
Member of Parliament for Wootton Bassett
1701–1707
With: Henry Pinnell 1701, 1702–1705
Thomas Jacob 1701–1702
John Morton Pleydell 1705–1706
Francis Popham 1706–1707
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Parliament of Great Britain
Parliament of Great Britain
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Parliament of England
Member of Parliament for Wootton Bassett
1707–1708
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Robert Cecil
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Francis Popham
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1710
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1710–1712
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1715–1716
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henry, john, viscount, bolingbroke, other, people, named, henry, john, henry, john, disambiguation, september, 1678, december, 1751, english, politician, government, official, political, philosopher, leader, tories, supported, church, england, politically, des. For other people named Henry St John see Henry St John disambiguation Henry St John 1st Viscount Bolingbroke ˈ s ɪ n dʒ ɪ n ˈ b ɒ l ɪ ŋ b r ʊ k 16 September 1678 12 December 1751 was an English politician government official and political philosopher He was a leader of the Tories and supported the Church of England politically despite his antireligious views and opposition to theology 1 2 3 4 5 He supported the Jacobite rebellion of 1715 which sought to overthrow the new king George I Escaping to France he became foreign minister for James Francis Edward Stuart He was attainted for treason but reversed course and was allowed to return to England in 1723 According to Ruth Mack Bolingbroke is best known for his party politics including the ideological history he disseminated in The Craftsman 1726 1735 by adopting the formerly Whig theory of the Ancient Constitution and giving it new life as an anti Walpole Tory principle 6 The Right HonourableThe Viscount BolingbrokePCHenry St John 1st Viscount Bolingbroke Attributed to Alexis Simon Belle c 1712 NPG 593 at the National Portrait Gallery London Secretary of State for the Southern DepartmentIn office 17 August 1713 31 August 1714MonarchsAnneGeorge IPreceded byThe Earl of DartmouthSucceeded byJames StanhopeSecretary of State for the Northern DepartmentIn office 21 September 1710 17 August 1713MonarchAnnePreceded byHenry BoyleSucceeded byWilliam BromleySecretary at WarIn office 1704 1708MonarchAnnePreceded byGeorge ClarkeSucceeded byRobert WalpoleJacobite Secretary of StateIn office July 1715 March 1716MonarchJames Francis Edward StuartPreceded byThomas HiggonsSucceeded byJohn Erskine Earl of MarPersonal detailsBornHenry St John16 September 1678Battersea SurreyEnglandDied12 December 1751 1751 12 12 aged 73 Battersea London Great BritainPolitical partyTorySpousesFrances WinchcombeMarie Claire des ChampsParentsHenry St John 1st Viscount St JohnLady Mary RichAlma materChrist Church OxfordSignatureArms of St John Argent on a chief gules two mullets or Contents 1 Early life 2 Early career 3 Exile 4 Pardon and return 5 Death 6 Impact 6 1 Republicanism in America 6 2 Influence in Britain 6 3 Enlightenment philosophy 7 Country Party 8 Works 9 Notes 10 Further reading 11 References 11 1 Primary sources 12 External linksEarly life editHenry St John was most probably born at Lydiard Tregoze the family seat in Wiltshire and christened in Battersea 7 St John was the son of Sir Henry St John 4th Baronet later 1st Viscount St John and Lady Mary Rich daughter of the 3rd Earl of Warwick 8 Although it has been asserted that St John was educated at Eton College and Christ Church Oxford his name does not appear on registers for either institution and there is no evidence to support either claim 9 It is possible he was educated at a Dissenting academy 10 He travelled to France Switzerland and Italy during 1698 and 1699 and acquired an exceptional knowledge of French 8 St John made friends with the Whigs James Stanhope and Edward Hopkins and corresponded with the Tory Sir William Trumball who advised him There appears indeed amongst us in England a strong disposition to liberty but neither honesty nor virtue enough to support it Oliver Goldsmith reported that he had been seen to run naked through the park in a state of intoxication Jonathan Swift his intimate friend said that he wanted to be thought the Alcibiades or Petronius of his age and to mix licentious orgies with the highest political responsibilities In 1700 he married Frances daughter of Sir Henry Winchcombe of Bucklebury Berkshire but this made little difference to his lifestyle 8 Early career editHe became a Member of Parliament in 1701 representing the family borough of Wootton Bassett in Wiltshire as a Tory His seat was Lydiard Park at Lydiard Tregoze now in the Borough of Swindon He attached himself to Robert Harley afterwards Lord Oxford then Speaker of the House of Commons and distinguished himself by his eloquence in debate eclipsing his schoolfellow Robert Walpole and gaining an extraordinary ascendancy over the House of Commons In May he had charge of the bill for securing the Protestant succession he took part in the impeachment of the Whig lords for their conduct concerning the Partition treaties and opposed the oath of loyalty against the Old Pretender In March 1702 he was chosen commissioner for taking the public accounts 8 After Queen Anne s accession St John supported the bills in 1702 and 1704 against occasional conformity and took a leading part in the disputes which arose between the two Houses In 1704 St John took office with Harley as secretary at war thus being brought into intimate relations with John Churchill 1st Duke of Marlborough by whom he was treated with favour In 1708 he left office with Harley on the failure of the latter s intrigue and retired to the country till 1710 when he became a privy counsellor and secretary of state in Harley s new ministry representing Berkshire in parliament He supported the bill for requiring a real property qualification for a seat in parliament In 1711 he founded the Brothers Club a society of Tory politicians and men of letters and the same year witnessed the failure of the two expeditions to the West Indies and to Canada promoted by him In 1712 he was the author of the bill taxing newspapers 11 The refusal of the Whigs to make peace with France in 1706 and again in 1709 when Louis XIV offered to yield every point for which the allies professed to be fighting citation needed showed that the war was not being continued in the national interest and the queen Parliament and the people supported the ministry in its wish to terminate hostilities Because of the diversity of aims among the allies St John was induced to enter into separate and secret negotiations with France for the security of English interests In May 1712 he ordered the Duke of Ormonde who had succeeded Marlborough in command to refrain from any further engagement These instructions were communicated to the French though not to the allies Louis putting Dunkirk as security into possession of England and the English troops deserted their allies almost on the battlefield Subsequently St John received the congratulations of the French foreign minister de Torcy on the French victory over Prince Eugene at Denain 24 July 1712 12 nbsp Bolingbroke pictured alongside the earl of Oxford together with a portrait of Francis Atterbury Engraving after a painting by Sir Godfrey Kneller In June 1712 St John s commercial treaty with France establishing free trade with that country was rejected by the House of Commons 12 The treaty was presented in the Commons by Arthur Moore as St John had been created Viscount Bolingbroke earlier that year A major campaign was waged against its approval under the slogan No Peace Without Spain At least 40 from the Tories voted to reject the treaty 13 In August 1712 Bolingbroke went to France and signed an armistice between England and France for four months Finally the Treaty of Utrecht was signed in March 1713 by all the allies except the emperor The first production of Addison s Cato was made by the Whigs the occasion of a great demonstration of indignation against the peace and by Bolingbroke for presenting the actor Barton Booth with a purse of fifty guineas for defending the cause of liberty against a perpetual dictator 12 Meanwhile the friendship between Bolingbroke and Harley the basis of the whole Tory administration had been gradually dissolved In March 1711 when the Marquis de Guiscard made an attempt on Harley s life Bolingbroke assumed temporary leadership of the ministry s affairs His difficulty in controlling the Tory back benchers however only made Harley s absence the more noticeable In May Harley obtained the earldom of Oxford and became lord treasurer while in July St John was greatly disappointed at receiving only his viscountcy instead of the earldom lately extinct in his family and at being passed over for the Order of the Garter 12 In September 1713 Jonathan Swift came to London and made a final vain attempt to reconcile his two friends But now a further cause of difference had arisen The queen s health was visibly breaking and the Tory ministers anticipated their downfall on the accession of the Elector of Hanover citation needed During Bolingbroke s diplomatic mission to France he had incurred blame for remaining at the opera while the Pretender was present and according to the Mackintosh transcripts he had several secret interviews with him Regular communications were kept up subsequently 12 In March 1714 Herville the French envoy in London sent to de Torcy the French foreign minister the substance of two long conversations with Bolingbroke in which the latter advised patience till after the accession of George I when a great reaction was to be expected in favour of the Pretender At the same time he spoke of the treachery of Marlborough and Berwick and of one Other presumably Oxford whom he refused to name all of whom were in communication with Hanover Both Oxford and Bolingbroke warned James Stuart that he could have little chance of success unless he changed his religion but the latter s refusal does not appear to have stopped the communications 12 Bolingbroke gradually superseded Oxford in the leadership Lady Masham the queen s favourite quarrelled with Oxford and identified herself with Bolingbroke s interests The harsh treatment of the Hanoverian demands was inspired by him and won favour with the queen while Oxford s influence declined and by his support of the Schism Bill in May 1714 an aggressive Tory measure forbidding all education by dissenters by making an episcopal licence obligatory for schoolmasters he probably intended to compel Oxford to give up the game Finally a charge of corruption brought by Oxford in July against Bolingbroke and Lady Masham in connexion with the commercial treaty with Spain failed and the lord treasurer was dismissed or retired on 27 July 1714 The Queen died four days later after appointing Shrewsbury to the lord treasurership 12 nbsp Henry St John Viscount BolingbrokeExile editOn the accession of George I the illuminations and bonfire at Lord Bolingbroke s house in Golden Square were particularly fine and remarkable but he was immediately dismissed from office 12 The new king had been close to the Whigs but he was willing to bring in Tories The Tories however refused to serve and gambled everything on an election which they lost The triumphant Whigs systematically removed the Tories from most of the posts nationally and regionally citation needed Bolingbroke followed an erratic course that baffled his contemporaries and historians citation needed He retired to Bucklebury and is said by whom to have now written the answer to the Secret History of the White Staff accusing him of being a Jacobite In March 1715 he in vain attempted to defend the late ministry in the new parliament and on the announcement of Walpole s intended attack upon the authors of the Treaty of Utrecht he gave up 12 Attainder of Viscount Bolingbroke Act 1714Act of Parliament nbsp Parliament of Great BritainLong titleAn act for the attainder of Henry viscount Bolingbroke of high treason unless he shall render himself to justice by a day certain therein mentioned Citation1 Geo 1 St 2 c 16DatesRoyal assent20 August 1715Bolingbroke fled in disguise to Paris a major blunder In an even greater blunder he joined the Pretender was made Earl of Bolingbroke in the Jacobite Peerage and took charge of foreign affairs in the Stuart court The uprising of 1715 was badly botched and the death of Louis XIV meant the Pretender had lost his major sponsor King Louis XV wanted peace with Britain and refused to endorse any further schemes In March 1716 Bolingbroke switched sides again He had lost his titles and property when Parliament voted a bill of attainder for treason 1 Geo 1 St 2 c 16 He hoped to recover the good graces of King George and indeed managed to do so in a few years 14 He wrote his Reflexions upon Exile and in 1717 his letter to Sir William Wyndham in explanation of his position generally considered one of his finest compositions but not published till 1753 after his death The same year he formed a liaison with a widow Marie Claire Deschamps de Marcilly whom he married in 1720 two years after his first wife s death He bought and resided at the estate of La Source near Orleans studied philosophy criticized the chronology of the Bible and was visited amongst others by Voltaire who expressed unbounded admiration for his learning and politeness 15 nbsp Henry St John 1st Viscount Bolingbroke Attributed to Charles Jervas Pardon and return edit nbsp Engraving showing Dawley House before Saint John s improvements Henry St John Bolingbroke Restitution Act 1724Act of Parliament nbsp Parliament of Great BritainLong titleAn Act for enabling Henry St John late Viscount Bolingbroke and the Heirs Male of his Body notwithstanding his Attainder to take and enjoy several Manors Lands and Hereditaments in the Counties of Wilts Surrey and Middlesex according to such Estates and Interests as to him or them are limited thereof by the Quinquepartite Indenture and other Assurances therein mentioned and for limiting the same in Default of Issue Male of the Body of the said late Viscount Bolingbroke to the other Sons of Henry Viscount St John successively in Tail Male and for other Purposes therein expressed Citation11 Geo 1 c 40DatesRoyal assent31 May 1725In 1723 through the medium of the king s mistress Ehrengard Melusine von der Schulenburg Duchess of Kendal and Munster he received a pardon and returned to London 16 Walpole reluctantly accepted his return In 1725 Parliament enabled him to hold real estate but without power of alienating it But this had been effected in consequence of a peremptory order of the king against Walpole s wishes who succeeded in maintaining his exclusion from the House of Lords He now bought an estate at Dawley near Uxbridge where he renewed his intimacy with Pope Swift and Voltaire took part in Pope s literary squabbles and wrote the philosophy for Pope s An Essay on Man 1734 15 which at Epistle I begins To Henry St John Lord Bolingbroke Awake my St John leave all meaner things To low ambition and the pride of kings Let us since life can little more supply Than just to look about us and to die Expatiate free o er all this scene of man A mighty maze but not without a plan On the first occasion which offered itself that of Pulteney s rupture with Walpole in 1726 he endeavoured to organize an opposition in conjunction with the former and Wyndham and in 1727 began his celebrated series of letters to The Craftsman attacking the Walpoles signed an Occasional Writer He won over the Duchess of Kendal with a bribe of 11 000 from his wife s estates and with Walpole s approval obtained an audience with the king His success was imminent and it was thought his appointment as chief minister was assured In Walpole s own words as St John had the duchess entirely on his side I need not add what must or might in time have been the consequence and he prepared for his dismissal But once more Bolingbroke s fortune turned rotten at the very moment it grew ripe and his projects and hopes were ruined by the king s death in June 15 nbsp Henry St John retired in June 1735 He wrote additional essays signed John Trot that appeared in the Craftsman in 1728 and in 1730 followed Remarks on the History of England by Humphrey Oldcastle attacking Walpole s policy Comment prompted by Bolingbroke was continued in the House of Commons by Wyndham and great efforts were made to establish the alliance between the Tories and the Opposition Whigs The Excise Bill in 1733 and the Septennial Bill in 1734 offered opportunities for further attacks on the government which Bolingbroke supported by a new series of papers in the Craftsman styled A Dissertation on Parties but the whole movement collapsed after the new elections which returned Walpole to power in 1735 with a large majority 15 Bolingbroke retired baffled and disappointed from the fray to France in June residing principally at the chateau of Argeville near Fontainebleau He now wrote his Letters on the Study of History printed privately before his death and published in 1752 and the True Use of Retirement In 1738 he visited England became one of the leading friends and advisers of Frederick Prince of Wales who now headed the opposition and wrote for the occasion The Patriot King which together with a previous essay The Spirit of Patriotism and The State of Parties at the Accession of George I were entrusted to Pope and not published Having failed however to obtain any share in politics he returned to France in 1739 and subsequently sold Dawley In 1742 and 1743 he again visited England and quarrelled with Warburton In 1744 he settled finally at Battersea with his friend Hugh Hume 3rd Earl of Marchmont and was present at Pope s death in May The discovery that the poet had printed secretly 1 500 copies of The Patriot King caused him to publish a correct version in 1749 and stirred up a further altercation with Warburton who defended his friend against Bolingbroke s bitter aspersions the latter whose conduct was generally reprehended publishing a Familiar Epistle to the most Impudent Man Living 15 nbsp Henry St John Viscount Bolingbroke and his second wife Mary Clara des Champs de Marcilly monument in St Mary s Church Battersea both epitaphs were written by Henry himselfDeath editIn 1744 he had been very busy assisting in the negotiations for the establishment of the new broad bottom administration and showed no sympathy for the Jacobite expedition in 1745 He recommended the tutor for Prince George afterwards George III About 1749 he wrote the Present State of the Nation an unfinished pamphlet Philip Stanhope 4th Earl of Chesterfield records the last words heard from him God who placed me here will do what He pleases with me hereafter and He knows best what to do He died on 12 December 1751 aged 73 his second wife having predeceased him by one year They were both buried in St Mary s the parish church at Battersea where a monument with medallions and inscriptions composed by Bolingbroke was erected to their memory 15 The monument was sculpted by Roubiliac 17 He was succeeded in the title as 2nd Viscount Bolingbroke according to the special remainder by his half nephew Frederick St John 3rd Viscount St John a title granted to Bolingbroke s father in 1716 from whom the title has descended 18 Frederick was the son of the 1st Viscount s half brother John St John by his father s second wife Angelica Magdalena Pelissary Impact edit nbsp Portrait of Henry St John attributed to Jonathan RichardsonBolingbroke Georgia was named after him Republicanism in America edit In the late 20th century Bolingbroke was rediscovered by historians as a major influence on Voltaire and on the American patriots John Adams Thomas Jefferson and James Madison Adams said that he had read all of Bolingbroke s works at least five times indeed Bolingbroke s works were widely read in the American colonies where they helped provide the foundation for the emerging nation s devotion to republicanism His vision of history as cycles of birth growth decline and death of a republic was influential in the colonies 19 as was his contention on liberty that one is free not from the law but by the law 20 Influence in Britain edit Bute and George III derived their political ideas from The Patriot King 21 Edmund Burke wrote his Vindication of Natural Society in imitation of Bolingbroke s style but in refutation of his principles and in the Reflections on the French Revolution he exclaims Who now reads Bolingbroke who ever read him through Burke denied that Bolingbroke s words left any permanent impression on his mind 15 Benjamin Disraeli lionized Bolingbroke as the Founder of Modern Toryism eradicating its absurd and odious doctrines and establishing its mission to subvert Whig attempts to transform the English Constitution into an oligarchy 22 The loss of Bolingbroke s great speeches was regretted by William Pitt more than that of the missing books of Livy and Tacitus By the early 20th century the writings and career of Bolingbroke would make a weaker impression than they made on contemporaries He was thought by the author in his biography in A Short Biographical Dictionary of English 1910 to be a man of brilliant and versatile talents but selfish insincere and intriguing defects of character which arguably led to his political ruin and his writings were described as glittering artificial and lacking philosophical merit 23 Philip Chesney Yorke his biographer in the Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th Edition commented that his abilities were exercised upon ephemeral objects and not inspired by lasting or universal ideas 15 Enlightenment philosophy edit Bolingbroke held certain views of opposition to church and theological teachings 1 that may have had influence during the Age of Enlightenment The atheist antireligious French German philosopher Baron d Holbach quotes Bolingbroke in his political work Good Sense in reference to Bolingbroke s statements against religion 2 Country Party editBolingbroke was especially influential in stating the need and outlining the machinery of a systematic parliamentary opposition Such an opposition he called a country party which he opposed to the court party Country parties had been formed before for instance after the king s speech to Parliament in November 1685 but Bolingbroke was the first to state the need for a continual opposition to the government To his mind the spirit of liberty was threatened by the court party s lust for power 24 Liberty could only be safeguarded by an opposition party that used constitutional methods and a legal course of opposition to the excesses of legal and ministerial power On the Idea of a Patriot King p 117 He instructed the opposition party to Wrest the power of government if you can out of the hands that employed it weakly and wickedly On the Spirit of Patriotism p 42 This work could be done only by a homogeneous party because such a party alone will submit to a drudgery of this kind On the idea of a Patriot King p 170 It was not enough to be eager to speak keen to act They who affect to head an opposition must be equal at least to those whom they oppose On the Spirit of Patriotism p 58 The opposition had to be of a permanent nature to make sure that it would be looked at as a part of daily politics It had on every occasion to confront the government On the Spirit of Patriotism p 61 He considered a party that systematically opposed the government to be more appealing than a party that did so occasionally On the Spirit of Patriotism pp 62 63 This opposition had to prepare itself to control government On the Spirit of Patriotism p 61 Works editLashmore Davies Adrian C ed The Correspondence of Henry St John and Sir William Trumbull 1698 1710 Eighteenth Century Life 32 no 3 2008 pp 23 179 Parke G ed The Letters and Correspondence of Henry St John Lord Viscount Bolingbroke 4 vols 1798 Dickinson H T ed The Letters of Henry St John to the Earl of Orrery 1709 1711 Camden Miscellany vol XXVI Camden Fourth Series Volume 14 London The Royal Historical Society 1975 pp 137 199 H T Dickinson ed Letters of Bolingbroke to the Earl of Orrery 1712 13 Camden Miscellany Vol XXXI Camden Fourth Series Volume 44 London The Royal Historical Society 1992 pp 349 371 The works of the late Right Honourable Henry St John Lord Viscount Bolingbroke new ed Vol 1 London 1809 The works of the late Right Honourable Henry St John Lord Viscount Bolingbroke new ed Vol 2 London 1809 The works of the late Right Honourable Henry St John Lord Viscount Bolingbroke new ed Vol 3 London 1809 The works of the late Right Honourable Henry St John Lord Viscount Bolingbroke new ed Vol 4 London 1809 The works of the late Right Honourable Henry St John Lord Viscount Bolingbroke new ed Vol 5 London 1809 The works of the late Right Honourable Henry St John Lord Viscount Bolingbroke new ed Vol 6 London 1809 The works of the late Right Honourable Henry St John Lord Viscount Bolingbroke new ed Vol 7 London 1809 The works of the late Right Honourable Henry St John Lord Viscount Bolingbroke new ed Vol 8 London 1809 The Works of Lord Bolingbroke Vol 1 University Press of the Pacific 2001 ISBN 0 89875 352 X Armitage David ed Bolingbroke Political Writings Cambridge Texts in the History of Political Thought Cambridge University Press 1997 ISBN 0 521 58697 6 The Philosophical Works of the Late Right Honourable Henry St John Lord Viscount Bolingbroke 3 vol 1776 reprint 2005 ISBN 1 4212 0061 9 Jackman S W ed The Idea of a Patriot King Indianapolis 1965 The Works of the Late Right Honorable Henry St John Lord Viscount Bolingbroke was first published in March 1754 in five quarto volumes and it was made popular by its controversial outlooks on religion A decade later the highly successful London bookseller Andrew Millar was still selling the Works for a considerable fortune setting the price at three guineas three pounds and three shillings a clear indication of the importance and value of the text In a letter to Dr Cadell in July 1765 Millar wrote I never sold a Bolingbroke in quarto under 3 guineas Wren paid so and I can t now alter the price 25 Notes edit a b See e g Henry St John Viscount Bolingbroke Letters or Essays Addressed to Alexander Pope Introduction The Works of Lord Bolingbroke With a Life Prepared Expressly for This Edition Containing Additional Information Relative to His Personal and Public Character Philadelphia Carey and Hart 1841 Vol 3 pp 40 64 Also available on Project Gutenberg as Letter to Alexander Pope in Letters to Sir William Windham and Mr Pope a b D Holbach Baron Good Sense paragraph 206 The philosophical works of Lord Bolingbroke Volume 2 p 287 Allen Brooke Moral Minority p 75 Voltaire God and Human Beings pp 64 80 104 Ruth Mack 2009 Literary Historicity Literature and Historical Experience in Eighteenth century Britain Stanford UP p 8 ISBN 9780804759113 H T Dickinson Bolingbroke London Constable 1970 p 2 a b c d Yorke 1911 p 161 Dickinson pp 2 3 Dickinson pp 3 4 Yorke 1911 pp 161 162 a b c d e f g h i Yorke 1911 pp 162 Alimento Antonella War Trade and Neutrality Europe and the Mediterranean in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries FrancoAngeli Yorke 1911 pp 162 163 a b c d e f g h Yorke 1911 pp 163 Lecky William Edward Harpole 1888 Volume I Chapter III History of England in the XVIIIth Century With 1877 preface first ed New York D Appleton and Company 1 3 and 5 Bond Street p 343 Dictionary of British Sculptors 1660 1851 by Rupert Gunnis p 331 Yorke 1911 pp 164 Garrett Sheldon Encyclopedia of Political Thought 2001 p 36 Martin van Gelderen and Quentin Skinner eds Republicanism Republicanism and Constitutionalism in Early Modern Europe 2002 p 41 Durant Will and Ariel 1965 The Age of Voltaire New York Simon and Schuster p 100 Disraeli Benjamin 1914 Whigs and Whiggism political writings Macmillan pp 218 220 Cousin 1910 p 41 Caroline Robbins Discordant Parties A Study of the Acceptance of Party by Englishmen Political Science Quarterly Vol 73 No 4 Dec 1958 pp 505 529 in JSTOR The manuscripts Letter from Andrew Millar to Dr Cadell July 16 1765 See footnote 27 millar project ed ac uk Retrieved 1 June 2016 Further reading editBiddle Sheila Bolingbroke and Harley Alfred A Knopf Inc 1974 Dickinson H T St John Henry styled first Viscount Bolingbroke 1678 1751 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 online edn September 2013 accessed 18 October 2017 short scholarly biography Dickinson Harry Thomas Bolingbroke 1970 scholarly biography Kramnick Isaac Bolingbroke and his circle the politics of nostalgia in the age of Walpole Cornell University Press 1992 Mansfield Harvey C Statesmanship and party government A study of Burke and Bolingbroke University of Chicago Press 2012 West Chris Bolingbroke Henry St John 1st Viscount 1678 1751 in The Encyclopedia of Political Thought 2015 References edit nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Yorke Philip Chesney 1911 Bolingbroke Henry St John Viscount In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 4 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 161 164 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Cousin John William 1910 Bolingbroke Henry St John 1st Viscount A Short Biographical Dictionary of English Literature London J M Dent amp Sons pp 40 41 via Wikisource Primary sources edit The works of Lord Bolingbroke 4 vols 1969 H St John Viscount Bolingbroke The idea of a patriot king ed S W Jackman Indianapolis 1965 Lord Bolingbroke historical writings ed I Kramnick Chicago 1972 Lord Bolingbroke contributions to The Craftsman ed S Varey 1982 Bolingbroke political writings ed D Armitage 1997 Bolingbroke s political writings the conservative Enlightenment ed B Cottret 1997 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Henry St John 1st Viscount Bolingbroke nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Henry St John 1st Viscount Bolingbroke Adamson Robert 1878 Henry St John Viscount Bolingbroke Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 4 9th ed pp 4 7 Henry St John 1st Viscount Bolingbroke at the Eighteenth Century Poetry Archive ECPA Works by Henry St John 1st Viscount Bolingbroke at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Henry St John 1st Viscount Bolingbroke at Internet Archive Royal Berkshire History Henry St John Viscount Bolingbroke Portraits of Henry St John 1st Viscount Bolingbroke at the National Portrait Gallery London nbsp Archival material relating to Henry St John 1st Viscount Bolingbroke UK National Archives nbsp Henry St John Bolingbroke Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Parliament of EnglandPreceded byHenry PinnellHenry St John Member of Parliament for Wootton Bassett1701 1707 With Henry Pinnell 1701 1702 1705Thomas Jacob 1701 1702John Morton Pleydell 1705 1706Francis Popham 1706 1707 Succeeded byParliament of Great BritainParliament of Great BritainPreceded byParliament of England Member of Parliament for Wootton Bassett1707 1708 With Francis Popham Succeeded byFrancis PophamRobert CecilPreceded byFrancis PophamRobert Cecil Member for Wootton Bassett1710 With Richard Goddard Succeeded byRichard GoddardEdmund PleydellPreceded byRichard NevilleSir John Stonhouse Bt Member of Parliament for Berkshire1710 1712 With Sir John Stonhouse Bt Succeeded bySir John Stonhouse BtRobert PackerPolitical officesPreceded byGeorge Clarke Secretary at War1704 1708 Succeeded byRobert WalpolePreceded byHenry Boyle Secretary of State for the Northern Department1710 1713 Succeeded byWilliam BromleyPreceded byThe Earl of Dartmouth Secretary of State for the Southern Department1713 1714 Succeeded byJames StanhopePreceded byThomas Higgons Jacobite Secretary of State1715 1716 Succeeded byJohn Erskine Earl of MarHonorary titlesPreceded byThe Earl Rivers Lord Lieutenant of Essex1712 1714 Succeeded byThe Earl of SuffolkPreceded byThe Earl of Dartmouth Senior Privy Counsellor1750 1751 Succeeded byThe Earl of Clarendon and RochesterPeerage of Great BritainNew title Viscount Bolingbroke1712 1751 Succeeded byFrederick St John Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Henry St John 1st Viscount Bolingbroke amp oldid 1185542885, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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