Cavendish, Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire 1757-1806, eldest daughter of John, first earl Spencer, was born 9 June 1757. She married in June 1774 the fifth duke of Devonshire, who was regarded as the first match in England, and his wife became the reigning queen of society. She set the fashion in dress, and introduced a simple and graceful style to supersede the ridiculous hoop. But though entering with great zest into the fashionable amusements of the time, she possessed intellectual and moral characteristics of a kind which entitles her to be classed above the ordinary women of fashion. Great as were her personal charms, they were not the chief source of her influence even over the majority of her admirers; it lay in the amenity and graces of her deportment, in her irresistible manners, and the seduction of her society (Wraxall, Posthumous Memoirs, iii. 342). Walpole writes of her, she effaces all without being a beauty; but her youthful figure, flowing good nature, sense and lively modesty, and modest familiarity make her a phenomenon (Letters, vi. 186). Madame d'Arblay when she met her did not find so much beauty as she expected, but far more of manner, politeness, and gentle quiet (Diary, v. 254). She delighted in the society of persons of talent, and numbered among her special friends Fox, Sheridan, and Selwyn. Wraxall records that he has seen the Duchess of Devonshire, then in the first bloom of youth, hanging on the sentences that fell from Johnson's lips, and contending for the nearest place to his chair (Memoirs, i. 133). Johnson when seventy-five visited the duke and duchess in 1784 at Chatsworth, and was, he mentions, kindly received and honestly pressed to stay, but on account of his bodily infirmities declined to prolong his visit (Boswell, Life of Johnson). The Duchess of Devonshire was very strongly opposed to the political party in power, and, notwithstanding the endeavours of the court party to deter her by the most illiberal and indecent abuse (Walpole, Letters, viii. 373), devoted her utmost efforts to secure the return of Fox at the famous Westminster election of 1784. During her canvass she entered some of the most blackguard houses in the Long Acre (Cornwallis Correspondence, i. 166); though very coarsely received by some worse than tars (Walpole, Letters, viii. 469), she was not in the least daunted, and is said to have exchanged kisses for promises of votes. She died at Devonshire House, Piccadilly, 30 March 1806, and was buried in the family vault at St. Stephen's Church, Derby. She left a son and two daughters. The duchess wrote verse, some of which displays very apt and elegant expression, while the sentiment also rises above the commonplace. Walpole refers to a number of poems circulating in manuscript, written by her while a girl to her father (ib. vi. 217), and mentions also having seen an Ode to Hope by her, easy and prettily expressed, though it does not express much, and Hope's Answer by the Rev. William Mason, of which he entertained a much higher opinion. A poem by her on the Passage of the Mountain of St. Gothard, dedicated to her children, was published with a French translation by the Abbé de Lille in 1802; an Italian translation by Signor Polidori appeared in 1803; a German translation in 1805; and in 1816 it was reprinted by the duke's second wife, Elizabeth [qv.], along with a Journey through Switzerland, originally published in 1796. It gave occasion to the ode of Coleridge with the refrain—O lady, nursed in pomp and pleasure,Whence learned you that heroic measure?Several portraits of the duchess are at Althorpe, Northamptonshire, the seat of Earl Spencer. One by Sir Joshua Reynolds and another by Gainsborough represent her as a child. Both Sir Joshua and Gainsborough also painted full-length pictures of her when duchess, and a fifth portrait is by Angelica Kauffmann. The Duke of Devonshire is the owner of two other portraits by Sir Joshua Reynolds, one at Chatsworth and the other at Chiswick (unfinished, with hat and feather). Other portraits by Gainsborough, Cosway, Downham, and Nixon are extant, and several have been engraved. According to Walpole, Lady Di Beauclerk had also drawn her portrait, and it had been engraved by Bartolozzi, but only a few impressions were taken (Letters, vii. 54). Wraxall states that the Duchess of Devonshire succeeded Lady Melbourne in the attachment of the Prince of Wales; but of what nature was that attachment, and what limits were affined to it by the duchess, must remain matter of conjecture (Memoirs, v. 371).
Sources:
Gent. Mag. lxxvi. pt. i. p. 386
Annual Register, xlvii. 324
Evans's Catalogue of Engraved Portraits, i. 98, ii. 122
Madame d'Arblay's Diary
Mrs. Delany's Correspondence
Thomas Raikes's Journal
Cornwallis Correspondence
Trotter's Memoirs of Fox
Notes and Queries, 4th ser. xi. 155, 227. The duchess was the theme of the Piccadilly Beauty and other ballads.
Contributor: T. F. H. [Thomas Finlayson Henderson]
Published: 1886