Transcript of The Castle of Otranto

The Castle of Otronto by Horace Walpole. Castle of Otronto by Horace Walpole. Cassell and Company, Ltd. London, Paris, New York, Melbourne, 1901. INTRODUCTION Horace Walpole was the youngest son of Sir Robert Walpole, the great statesman who died Earl of Orford. He was born in 1717, the year in which his father resigned office, remaining in opposition for almost three years before his return to a long tenure of power. Horace Walpole was educated at Eaton, where he formed a school friendship with Thomas Grey, who was but a few months older. In 1739 Grey was traveling companion with Walpole in France and Italy until they differed and parted, but the friendship was afterwards renewed and remained firm to the end. Horace Walpole went from Eaton to King's College, Cambridge, and entered Parliament in 1741, the year before his father's final resignation and acceptance of an earldom. His way of life was made easy to him, as usher of the exchequer, controller of the pipe, and clerk of the estates of the exchequer he received nearly two thousand a year for doing nothing, lived with his father, and amused himself. Horace Walpole idled, and amused himself with the small life of the fashionable world to which he was proud of belonging, though he had a quick eye for its vanities. He had social wit and liked to put it to small uses, but he was not an empty idler, and there were seasons when he could become a sharp judge of himself. "'I am sensible,' he wrote to his most intimate friend, "'I am sensible of having more follies and weaknesses and fewer real good qualities than most men. I sometimes reflect on this, though I own too seldom. I always want to begin acting like a man, and a sensible one, which I think I might be if I would.' He had deep home affections, and, under many polite affectations, plenty of good sense. Horace Walpole's father died in 1745. The eldest son, who succeeded the earldom, died in 1751, and left a son, George, who was, for a time, insane, and lived until 1791. As George left no child, the title and estates passed to Horace Walpole, then seventy-four years old, and the only uncle who survived. Horace Walpole thus became Earl of Orford during the last six years of his life. As to the title, he said that he felt himself being called names in his old age. He died unmarried in the year 1797, at the age of eighty. He had turned his house at Strawberry Hill by the Thames near Twickenham into a Gothic villa—eighteenth-century Gothic—and amused himself by spending freely upon its adornment with such things as were then fashionable as objects of taste. But he delighted also in his flowers and his trellises of roses and the quiet Thames. When confined by gout to his London house in Arlington Street, flowers from Strawberry Hill and a bird were necessary consolations. He set

The Castle of Otranto

автор Horace Walpole
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