Page:Memoirs of a Trait in the Character of George III.djvu/294

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NO. 9.
APPENDIX.
239

dom) was owing their being now brought forward, as an appropriate addition, he thinks, to "A Trait in the Character of George III."

On the first meeting of the House of Commons, June 29th, 1830, after the demise of George IV., Sir Robert Peel coming forward in his official character, paid a well deserved tribute to the memory of the deceased Monarch. "The late King," said the honourable Baronet, "was an admirable gentleman, and a liberal patron of the arts. His heart always sympathized with any appeal to his benevolence.—(Hear, hear, hear, and great cheering.)—I do not wish, Sir, to deliver any overstrained panegyric on his late Majesty; his acts speak for themselves."—That these praises were not words of course, the weight of which would not bear being sifted to the bottom, the following illustrative facts will show.

Mr. Edmund Scott was an engraver of respectable abilities, well known as such formerly in the metropolis, but subsequently a crayon painter, resident at Guildford in Surry. He was a man of strict sobriety and regular habits, but having a large family, and not being Remunerated in proportion to his labours, he got into pecuniary difficulties, was arrested and in confinement:—when the Prince of Wales heard of his situation, and through the intervention of a military gentleman[1] his royal high-

  1. According to the Artist's Son, this was Lieutenant Colonel Huxley Sandon.