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V. A ‘Petty’ Professor of Modern History: William Smyth (1765–1849)1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 December 2011

K. T. B. Butler
Affiliation:
Mistress of Girton College and Lecturer in Italian in the University
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Extract

In 1807 William Smyth, tutor of Peterhouse, was appointed Regius Professor of Modern History at Cambridge through the good offices of Lord Henry Petty, later third Marquis of Lansdowne and then still liberal M.P. for the University. Two years later, not long after Smyth had delivered his first course of lectures, there appeared the caricature of him reproduced as a frontispiece to this paper and bearing the same title. It represents him in profile lecturing to a drowsy and yawning audience of undergraduates and elderly bewigged Fellows.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1948

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References

2 Roscoe Papers, Letter 4602, 6 December 1811.

3 The Hon. Berkeley, G. F., My Life and Recollections (1866), iv, 136Google Scholar.

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6 Sykes, Norman, Edmund Gibson, Bishop of London (Oxford, 1926), pp. 94107; cf. alsoGoogle ScholarSir Firth, Charles in English Historical Review (1917)Google Scholar; Browning, Oscar in Cambridge Review (25 November and 9 December 1927)Google Scholar; Gooch, G. P., ‘The Cambridge Chair’ in Studies in Modern History (1931)Google Scholar; Winstanley, D. A., Unreformed Cambridge (C.U.P., 1935), pp. 154–62Google Scholar.

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26 Ibid. Letter 4568.

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39 ‘Autobiographical Sketch.’

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51 Ibid. p. 56.

52 These are printed as ‘Supplementary Lectures’, in Fr. Rev. II.

53 Roscoe Papers, Letter 4646.

54 Fr. Rev. III, 324.

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70 Notably: ‘Bologna’, a humorous account of a concert at Downing, and ‘Architectural Improvements’, a skit on the many restorations and new buildings planned in Cambridge about 1818. In C. Wordsworth's Scholae Academicae, there is a third Jeu d'esprit by Smyth on the lectures of his friend E. D. Clark, Professor of Anatomy.

71 Smyth was a great tea-drinker and always insisted on preparing it himself. According to Mrs Martin, , Memories of Seventy Years, ‘he had a seal with a tea-pot and Vert engraved on it’Google Scholar.

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73 Lady Frances Morley was the second wife of the Earl of Morley and one of the wittiest, liveliest and most popular of the society women of the day.

74 Roscoe Papers, Letter 4625, 18 March 1878.

75 Impressions that remained (1919), 1, 3.Google Scholar H. Vaughan, in his article on Smyth in the Gentleman's Magazine, makes the same assertion, and both say that he aroused Jane's amused indignation by telling her that he thought he detected a Unitarian tendency in her later novels.

76 Visiting my Relations, etc., pp. 149-50.

77 Reminiscences of Thought and Feeling, p. 301.

78 Ibid. pp. 153-8.

79 Professor of Music, 1789-1821, violinist; a great friend of Smyth's, whose Installation Ode he set to music.

80 Mrs Frere?

81 Joseph Jowett (1782-1813), Professor of Civil Law. Came of a very musical family. Had a fine alto voice and frequently organized concerts at Trinity Hall and Queens'.

82 Roscoe Papers, Letter 4664, to William Roscoe, junior.

83 Brit. Mus. Add. MSS. 39,809, f. 18, Letter from Smyth to John Mallet, 25 August 1846. Cf. also Roscoe Papers, Letter 4664, to William Roscoe, junior.

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