Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 November 2009
Ritual Commission. Evelyn came up to London and we then went down together to Hatfield.
317 Cairns invited Carnarvon to dinner on 7 February, the eve of the meeting of Parliament, to discuss his successor (Cairns to Carnarvon, 3 February 1870: CP, BL 60768, fos 16–17).
318 Henry Charles Cadogan (1810–1873), 4th Earl Cadogan (1864).
319 William Drogo Montagu (1823–1890), 7th Duke of Manchester (1855), MP for Bewdley (1848–1852) and for Huntingdonshire (1852–1855).
320 Hansard, CXCIX, 3 February 1870, cols 16–40.
321 Dr Isaac Earl Featherstone (1813–1876) and Francis Dillon Bell (1826–1898) were sent to London to negotiate the retention of two British regiments and a loan of two million pounds towards public works. They went back to New Zealand with a loan of only one million pounds.
322 Lord Cowley, who had been staying at Highclere, wrote to Lady Derby, ‘Lord Carnarvon seems low and dispirited about politics. He evidently wants Cranborne [sic] to make it up with Dizzy, but despairs of bringing about a reconciliation. He is afraid that Dizzy will give the lead in the Lords to the Duke of Buckingham or Marlborough, I forget which, but it is pretty much the same’ (W.A.H.C. Gardner, Baroness Burghclere (ed.), A Great Lady's Friendships: letters to Mary, Marchioness of Salisbury, Countess of Derby, 1862–1890 (London, 1933), p. 238).
323 See Carnarvon to Cairns, 16 February 1870: Cairns Papers, TNA, PRO 30/51/8, fo. 65.
324 Carnarvon wrote afterwards to Salisbury, ‘I am, as you know, sorry that matters cannot be so arranged as to admit of your taking the lead: be as it may, it may do after all perhaps best as it is’ (Carnarvon to Salisbury, 16 February 1870: Hatfield House Papers, 3M/E).
325 Frederick Thesiger (1794–1878), 1st Baron Chelmsford (1858), Lord Chancellor (1858–1859).
326 Derby set out at length for his own consideration ‘Reasons for accepting’ and ‘Reasons against accepting’ (Vincent, Derby, I, p. 50).
327 With the changing situation, Carnarvon told Salisbury, ‘There would be no reason why you should not take the lead in the House if Disraeli were out of the way’ (Carnarvon to Salisbury, 21 February 1870: Hatfield House Papers, 3M/E).
328 Carnarvon was disappointed at Salisbury's decision: ‘I admit all the weight of your argument whilst I cannot avoid regretting your conclusion’ (Carnarvon to Salisbury, 2 March 1870: Hatfield House Papers, 3 M/E).
329 The Irish Land Bill (Hansard, CCII, 28 June 1870, cols 1052–1088).
330 Ibid., CCIII, cols 703–729, on the Canadian frontier volunteer militia.
331 Count Albrecht von Bernstorff (1809–1873), Prussian Foreign Minister (1861–1862), ambassador at London (1871–1873).
332 Henry Mayhew (1812–1877), joint first editor of Punch (1841), author of London Labour and the London Poor (London, 1851; reissued with additions 1861, 1862, 1864, 1865).