CHAP, is.] THE ABEEST AND WHAT PRECEDED IT. dividing Ms laurels; and till Powell could double Richard and Sir John Brute, till O'Brien could alternate Ranger with Macbeth, and till Weston could exhibit Lear by the side of Abel Drngger, Garrick had no call to be seriously alarmed. Be that as it might, however, Powell's success was a great thing for the authors. He came to occupy for them, oppor- tunely, a field which the other had avowedly abandoned; and Goldsmith, always earnest for the claims of writers, sympa- thised strongly in his success. Another incident of the theatrical season made hardly less noise. O'Brien's charms in Ranger and Lovemore proved too much for lady Susan Fox,* and she ran away with him. It cured Walpole for a time of his theatre-going. He had a few days before been protesting to Lord Hertford, that he had the republican spirit of an old Roman, and that his name was thoroughly Hora- tius; t but a homely-looking earl's-daughter running away with a handsome young player, ran away with all his philo- sophy. He thought a footman would have been preferable; | choose from among the living English actors, before he can establish the fact of his having had equals or superiors in the art. So when Johnson talked of the old .actors during the tour to the Hebrides (Boswdl, iv. 132:) "you compare them with " Garrick, and see the deficiency. Gfarrick's great distinction is his universality." * "A very pleasing girl, though not handsome. . . . Lord Ilchester doated on " her." Letters to Mann, i. 195. " The king," writes her uncle Lord Holland to Mr. Grenville, asking him for a place in the New York Customs to banish O'Brien to, "has shown so much compassion on this unhappy occasion, that, &c." GrenmUe Correspondence, ii. 447. "O'Brien and Lady Susan," says Walpole to Lord Hertford "are to be transported to the Ohio and have a grant of 40,000 " acres." Coll. Lett. iv. 404. t Ibid, iv. 336. J Coll. Lett. iv. 405. Within a very few months his preference was gratified by another of his lady friends, Lord Eockingham's youngest sister, actually marrying her Irish footman, Mr. William Sturgeon. Coll.Lett.N. 460. ("Asensible, " well-educated woman," says Gray. " 27 years old indeed, and homely enough." Correspondence with Mason, 335.) Yet, such are the strange inconsistencies of character, this same Horace Walpole could thus write to Mann eight years later. " We have an instance in our family of real dignity of mind, and I set it down w four actors more different from one another than you are from yourself."