William Cornwallis
Of alehouses
I
write this in an alehouse, into which I am driven by night which would not give
me leave to find an honester harbour. I am without any company but ink and
paper and them I use instead of talking to myself. My host hath already given
me his knowledge but I am little bettered. I am now trying whether myself be
better in his discretion.The first to note here is how honestly every place speaks and how ill every man lives. Not a post, not a painted cloth in the house but cries out Fear God, and yet the parson of the town scarce keeps this instruction. It is a strange thing how men belie themselves—everyone speaks well and means naughtily. They cry out if man with man breaks his word, and yet nobody keeps his promise with virtue. But why should these inferiors be blamed since the noblest professions are become base? Their instructions rest in the examples of higher fortunes, and they are blind and lead men into sensuality. Methinks a drunken cobbler and a mere hawking gentleman rank equally, both end their pursuits with pleasing their senses—this the eye, the other the taste.
What differs scraping misery from a false cheater? the director of both is covetousness and the end game. Lastly, courting of a mistress and buying of a whore are somewhat like—the end is luxury. Perhaps the one speaks more finely but they both mean plainly. I have been thus seeking differences, and to distinguish of places I am fain to fly to the sign of an alehouse and to the stately coming in of greater houses. For men, titles and clothes, not their lives and actions, help me. So were they all naked and banished from the Heralds’ books. They are without any evidence of pre-eminence, and their souls cannot defend them from community.
http://essays.quotidiana.org/cornwallis/of_alehouses/
William Cornwallis
Admiral Sir William Cornwallis
GCB (10 February 1744 – 5 July 1819) was a Royal Navy
officer who fought in the Napoleonic Wars. He was the brother of Charles Cornwallis, the
1st Marquess Cornwallis, governor-general of India. He is depicted
in the Horatio Hornblower novel, Hornblower and the Hotspur.
Early
life and career
William Cornwallis was born 10
February 1744 and entered the navy in 1755. His promotion was rapid and in 1766
he reached post-rank. Until 1779 he held various commands doing the
regular work of the navy in convoy. In that year he commanded HMS
Lion (64) in the fleet of Admiral Byron.
The Lion was very roughly handled in the Battle
of Grenada on 6 July 1779 and had to make her way alone to Jamaica. In March
1780 he fought an action in company with two other vessels against a much
superior French force off Monti Cristi, and had another encounter with them
near Bermuda
in June. The force he engaged was the fleet carrying the troops of Rochambeau to After taking part in the second relief of Gibraltar, Cornwallis returned to North America and served with Hood in the Battle of St. Kitts and with Rodney in the Battle of the Saintes on 12 April 1782. Some very rough verses which he wrote on the action have been printed in
In 1788 he went to the East Indies as commodore. He remained there until 1794. He played a role in the war with Tippoo Sahib and helped to reduce Pondicherry in August 1793. At