Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: THE HOLLAND HOUSE CIRCLE CHAPTER I INTRODUCTORY The founder of the Fox familySir Stephen's wealthAn elderly bridegroomHenry FoxA runaway matchEarly history of the manor of KensingtonCope CastleThe Earl of HollandUnder the CommonwealthA house to letLady Warwick and Addison The last of the WarwicksA Royal suitorLord Holland's cupidityA well-feathered nestThe beginnings of Charles Fox His brother StephenLord Holland's minority. " I HE Fox family rose with a rapidity characteristic X. of the seventeenth century, when everything was possible to the adroit courtier. Sir Stephen, the founder of its fortunes, who was born in 1627, came from what his anonymous biographer calls " honest and approved parents of a middle station " in Wiltshire. He entered the household of the Earl of Northumberland, High Admiral of England, as a valet, and then passed into the service of that nobleman's brother, Lord Percy. After helping his master in the management of the Ordnance Board during the campaign of 1651, which ended in the overthrow of the Royalists at Worcester, he took an active part in smuggling Prince Charles out of the country, and was steward and collector of intelligence to the vagabond Court. Through the excellence of his information he was able to announce the news of Cromwell's death to the Prince six hours before any express reached Brussels. After the Restoration, Stephen Fox stood high in the Royal favour and held various lucrative appointments. In 168o his friend and admirer, Evelyn, reckoned him to be worth .£2oo,ooo or more, "honestly got and unenvied, which is next to a miracle." Honesty is a relative virtue. Fox's confidences to the sympathetic Pepys show that he farmed the Paymastership-General to some purpose, extracting a comfortable twelve per...