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Book I,

Chap. V.

service. I have already taken the first step towards it that is proper in our situation, and will pursue that by others as fast as I can have opportunity; hoping that the secret will be as inviolably kept on your side as it shall be on this, so far as the nature of such a transaction between two persons who must see one another sometimes can pass unobserved.' IEIAN MSS.

6

4. 1721. Among the same papers,' says the Reviewer quoted on the previous page, 'there is a letter from Mrs. Oglethorpe to the Pretender (Jan. 17, 1721), containing assurances from Lord Oxford of his eternal respect and good wishes, which from accidental circumstances he had been unable to convey in the usual manner.'

THE COL

LECTOR OF

THE HAR

Edin. Rev.,

as before.

5. 1722. April 14. THE PRETENDER [to Lord OXFORD?] 'If you have not heard sooner or oftener from me, it hath not, I can assure you, been my fault. Neither do I attribute to your's the long silence you have kept on your side, but to a chain of disappointments and difficulties which hath been also the only reason of my not finding all this while a method of conveying my thoughts to you, and receiving your advice, which I shall ever value as I ought, because I look upon you not only as an able lawyer but a sincere friend. This will, I hope, come soon to your hands, and the worthy friend by whose canal I send it will accompany it, by my directions, with all the lights and informa- Stuart tion he or I can give, and which it is therefore useless to repeat here.'

6. 1722. April 16. THE PRETENDER to ATTERBURY. 'I am sensible of the importance of secrecy in such an affair, yet I do not see how it will be possible to raise a sufficient sum, or to make a reasonable concert in England, without letting some more persons into the project. You on the place are best judge how these points are to be compassed, but I cannot but think that [the Earl of Oxford ?] might be of great use on this occasion. [Lord Lansdowne ?] is to write to him on the subject, and I am confident that if you two were to compare notes together you would be able to contrive and settle matters on a more sure and solid foundation than they have hitherto been.'

7. 1722. In a report made to the Earl of Mar by George Kelly, one of his emissaries employed in England, it is stated that on the delivery, by Kelly, of Mar's letter to Atterbury, the prelate asked the messenger if he had anything to say, in addition to the contents of the letter, and that he replied (in the jargon of his calling): 'It is a proposal for joining stocks with the Earl of Oxford, and taking the management of the Company's business into their hands.' Atterbury, according to this story, required a day's deliberation, and then told Kelly that he was ' resolved to join both heart and hand with the Earl; and not only so,

Papers, 1722.

Ibid.

Book I,
Chap. V.
THE COL-

LECTOR OF
THE HAR-

but in the management and course of the business he would shew him all the deference and respect that was due to a person who had so justly filled the stations which he had been in.' The Bishop, says Kelly, also added that he was 'resolved to dedicate the remainder of his days to the LEIAN MSS. King's service, and proposed, by this reunion, to repay some part of the personal debt which he owed to the Earl of Oxford, to whom he would immediately write upon this subject.' The messenger goes on to assure Lord Mar that Atterbury 'is entirely of your opinion that there is not much good to be expected from the present managers, and thinks it no great vanity to say that the Earl of Oxford and himself are the fittest persons for this purpose; but the chief success of their partnership will depend upon the secrecy of it.'

Ibid.

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Of the genuineness of the several letters,-of the credit due to the emissaries and their reports, even of the accurate identification, in some instances, of the Mr. Hackets,' 'Houghtons,' and numerous other pseudonyms, under which 'Lord Oxford' is assumed to be veiled, there are, as yet, no adequate means of judging,

CHAPTER VI.

THE FOUNDERS OF THE SLOANE MUSEUM.

'He pry'd through Nature's store,

Whate'er she in th' ethereal round contains,
Whate'er she hides beneath her verdant floor,

The vegetable and the mineral reigns.

At times, he scann'd the globe,-those small domains
Where restless mortals such a turmoil keep,-

Its seas, its floods, its mountains, and its plains.'—

THOMSON.

Flemish Exiles in England.-The Adventures, Mercantile and Colonial Enterprises, and Vicissitudes of the COURTENS.-William COURTEN and his Collections.The Life and Travels of Sir Hans SLOANE-His acquisition of COURTEN'S Museum.-Its growth under the new Possessor.-History of the Sloane Museum and Library, and of their purchase by Parliament.

BOOK 1,

Chap. VI.

FOUNDERS

OF THE

MUSEUM.

THE history of the rise and growth of our English trade is, in a conspicuous degree, a history of the immigration THE hither of foreign refugees, and of what was achieved by their energy and industry, when put forth to the utmost SLOANE under the stimulus and the stern discipline of adversity. Other countries, no doubt, have derived much profit from a similar cause, but none, in Europe, to a like extent. By turns almost all the chief countries of the Continent have sent us bands of exiles, who brought with them either special skill in manual arts and manufactures, or special

Book I, Chap. VI.

THE

FOUNDERS

OF THE

SLOANE

MUSEUM.

FLEMISH

EXILES IN

ENGLAND.

THE

COURTENS;

THEIR ADVENTURES

PRISES.

capabilities for expanding our foreign commerce. To Flemish refugees, and more particularly to those of them who were driven hither by Spanish persecution in the sixteenth century, England owes a large debt in both respects. Our historians have given more prominence of late years to this chapter in the national annals than was ever given to it before, but there is no presumption in saying that not a little of what was achieved by exiles towards the industrial greatness of the nation has yet to be told.

Nor is it less evident that, over and above the political and public interest of the things done, or initiated, by the new comers in their adopted country, the personal and family annals of the exiles possess, in not a few instances, a remarkable though subsidiary interest of their own. certain cases, to trace the fortunes of a refugee family, is at once to throw some gleams of light on obscure portions of our commercial history, and to tell a romantic story of real life.

In

One such instance presents itself in the varied fortunes of the COURTENS. That family attained an unusual degree of commercial prosperity, and attained it with unusual AND ENTER rapidity. In the second generation it seemed for a while -to have struck a deep root in our English soil. It owned lands in half-a-dozen English counties, and its alliance was sought by some of the greatest families in the kingdom. In the next generation its fortunes sank more rapidly than they had risen. In the fourth, the last of the COURTENS was for almost half his life a wanderer, living under a feigned name, and he continued so to live when at length enabled to return to his country. The true name had been preserved only in the records of interminable litigation-in England, Holland, India, and America-about the scattered

Book I,
THE

Chap. VI.

FOUNDERS

OF THE

MUSEUM.

wreck of a magnificent property. But the enterprise of the family, in its palmy days, had planted for England a prosperous colony. It had opened new paths to commerce in the East Indies, as well as in the West. And its last SLOANE survivor found a solace for many ruined hopes in the collection of treasures of science, art and literature, which came to be important enough to form no small contribution towards the eventual foundation of the British Museum.

FOUNDER OF

THE FAMILY.

In 1567 William COURTEN, a thriving dealer in linens THE and silks, living at Menin in Flanders, was together with his wife, Margaret CASIER, accused of heresy. COURTEN was thrown into the prison of the Inquisition, but contrived both to make his escape into England, and to enable his wife soon to join him. He established himself in London, in the same business which had thriven with him at home. His wife shared in its toils, and by skilfully adapting her exertions to those tastes for finery in the families of rich citizens which were now striving with some Family success against the rigour of the old sumptuary laws Records of made the business more prosperous than before. It expanded until the poor haberdasher of 1567 had become a notability on the London Exchange.

In 1571 a son was born to the exiles. This second William COURTEN was bred as a merchant rather than as a tradesman. He had good parts, and seems to have started into life with a passion for bold enterprise. His early training in London was continued at Haerlem, and there he laid a foundation for commercial success by marrying the daughter of Peter CROMMELINCK, a wealthy merchant. First and last, his wife brought him a dowry of £40,000, of which sum it was stipulated by the father's

the Courtens;

in Ms.

Sloane, 3515,

passim.

(B. M.)

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