"To the British Museum. I looked over the Travels of the Duke of Tuscany, and found the passage the existence of which Croker denies. His blunders are really incredible. The article has been received with general contempt. Really Croker has done me a great service. I apprehended a strong reaction, the natural effect of such a success; and, if hatred had left him free to use his very slender faculties to the best advantage, he might have injured me much. He should have been large in acknowledgment; should have taken a mild and expostulatory tone; and should have looked out for real blemishes, which, as I too well know, he might easily have found. Instead of that, he has written with such rancour as to make everybody sick. I could almost pity him. But he is a bad, a very bad, man: a scandal to politics and to letters."
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Members of the Parliament of the United KingdomFellows of the Royal SocietyAnglicans from the United KingdomPoliticians from IrelandAuthors from Ireland
Original Language: English
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Sources
Thomas Babington Macaulay, journal entry (13 April 1849), quoted in George Otto Trevelyan, The Life and Letters of Lord Macaulay, Vol. II (1876), p. 259
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/John_Wilson_Croker
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John Wilson Croker
John Wilson Croker (20 December 178010 August 1857) was an Anglo-Irish statesman and author.
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