William Stanhope, in Horace Walpole’s words, ‘raised himself from a younger brother’s fortune to the first posts in the Government, without either the talent of speaking in Parliament or any interest there’.
There was something very singular [Hervey writes] both in this man’s acquisition of fame and in his loss of it; for when he was at the court of Spain, without doing anything there that might not have been transacted by a common clerk, all parties at home flattered and courted him ... [But] as soon as he came over and was made secretary of state, the sound of his name began to die away. He was forgotten in his eminence, seen every day, and never mentioned.
Hervey, Mems. 174.
He retained his post by the favour of the King, which he lost when he resigned with the Pelhams in 1746. He died 8 Dec. 1756.
