Furnese, whose father died insane,
On Walpole’s fall Furnese was included in Pulteney’s list of nominees to the secret committee, to which he was elected. He was one of the ten personal followers who went over with Pulteney to the Administration, all of them receiving places, in his case the joint secretaryship of the Treasury vice Henry Legge, who complained that his livelihood was being taken away and an important office of business converted into a sinecure merely to add ‘to the superfluities of one who is already possessed of a large estate’.
And see with that important face
Berenger’s clerk to take his place
Into the Treasury come;
With pride and meanness act thy part
Thou look’st at the very thing thou art
Thou Bourgeois Gentilhomme.
Walpole to Mann, 29 July, 11 Sept. 1742.
When in the next session Bath declared himself opposed to a revival of the secret committee, Furnese took the opportunity to resign, inspiring a press statement to the effect that, his eyes having been opened to the true character of his colleagues and to the terms on which his ‘lucrative post’ had been given him, ‘with a noble abhorrence of both he ... made haste to quit a fellowship he thought injurious to his virtue’.
