Charles Paget was captaining his fifth ship in the navy
I have just learnt [the cause] ... He is very odd temper’d and was teaz’d, first by his own family, and then by his little wife and hers, and in a fit of vexation swallowed a whole phial of laudanum, which luckily made him sick, but enough of which remain’d to cause a severe illness. He must be a strange man, for he certainly seem’d extremely in love with his wife, but when [his physician] expressed his astonishment at what he had done, he answer’d (but seriously and angrily), ‘Can you wonder when you know that I have been d— d fool enough to marry, and have endured it almost a fortnight?’
Leveson Gower, ii. 44; Paget Brothers, 35, 38, 40.
Paget supported Pitt’s second administration: when he went to sea again in command of ‘the finest frigate in our service’, his mother wrote to his brother Arthur, 4 Jan. 1806:
I could have wished that on account of his health he had remained on shore till the bad weather was over, and I think Mr Pitt would wish it for another reason, as I understand the opposition are straining every nerve ... at such a time the loss of three Members will be felt, and I am afraid neither yourself or Charles will be in England.
Paget Brothers, 44; Paget, 62.
When Lord Paget resumed his seat at Milborne Port in 1806, Charles was returned instead for the other family borough of Caernarvon and retained the seat until he was succeeded by his nephew in 1826, giving a general support to administration, sometimes at their request (June-July 1807),
Paget, now on half-pay, did not support Catholic relief in the ensuing Parliament. He caused some surprise by another minority vote, on 17 Feb. 1817, against the wartime salary of the Admiralty secretary.
