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Sir Nathanial William Wraxall (1751-1831), traveller and writer,
served as an MP from 1780 to 1794 and was made a baronet in 1813.
Upon publication in 1815, his memoirs were an immediate, though
controversial, success: 1,000 copies sold out within five weeks.
Accused of libelling a Russian diplomat, and found guilty, Wraxall
brought out this second edition later that same year, with the
offending passages removed. Volume 1 covers 1772-81, a period of
extensive travel, which took him across several European countries,
including Portugal, France, Germany and Italy, returning to London
in 1780. The volume also contains the start of the work's
controversial second part, which deals with the beginning of
Wraxall's parliamentary career under Lord North's administration.
The memoirs make for an entertaining read, and few from the
distinguished circles in which the author moved are spared from his
merciless facility for description.
Sir Nathanial William Wraxall (1751-1831), traveller and writer,
served as an MP from 1780 to 1794 and was made a baronet in 1813.
Upon publication in 1815, his memoirs were an immediate, though
controversial, success: 1,000 copies sold out within five weeks.
Accused of libelling a Russian diplomat, and found guilty, Wraxall
brought out this second edition later that same year, with the
offending passages removed. Volume 2 comprises the majority of the
second, and more controversial, part of the work, which covers
1781-4. Wraxall's early parliamentary years were a difficult period
in England, the American War of Independence dominating Lord
North's administration until his unexpected resignation on 20 March
1782. The 'great despondency' continued; nevertheless, Wraxall's
colourful delineations of Fox and Burke, the Earl of Shelburne,
Sheridan and Pitt, as well as 'the less efficient members of the
cabinet', make for an entertaining read.
Nathaniel Wraxall (1751 1831) worked for the East India Company
before becoming an MP in 1780. He travelled extensively in Europe
and moved in royal and diplomatic circles, collecting anecdotes
which later made their way into several popular travel narratives
and memoirs that were to bring him great fame. In this work,
published in two volumes in 1799 and using an epistolary form,
Wraxall gives his impressions of a number of European courts that
he visited in the late 1770s. In Volume 1 the author gives a
personal account of the tragic destiny of Queen Caroline Matilda of
Denmark (the sister of George III of Great Britain), who was exiled
to Celle in Germany after an extra-marital affair with her
husband's doctor and counsellor. He also describes Frederick the
Great of Prussia and his court, and laments the decline of the
once-great city of Cracow.
Nathaniel Wraxall (1751 1831) worked for the East India Company
before becoming an MP in 1780. He travelled extensively in Europe
and moved in royal and diplomatic circles, collecting anecdotes
which later made their way into several popular travel narratives
and memoirs that were to bring him great fame. In this work,
published in two volumes in 1799 and using an epistolary form,
Wraxall gives his impressions of a number of European courts that
he visited in the late 1770s. Volume 2 describes Poland as a
country in decline, and discusses the historical background to its
present condition. He also provides anecdotes of the court and
people of Vienna, and especially of the Habsburg monarchs Maria
Theresa and Joseph II.
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