Andrew Marvell,the Lord Maynard and the Ballastage Office |
| |
Authors: | Nicholas von Maltzahn |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. Department of English , University of Ottawa , Ottawa , Canada Nicholas.VonMaltzahn@uottawa.ca |
| |
Abstract: | In the Restoration, Andrew Marvell was elected to the Elder Brethren of the London (Deptford) Trinity House (May 1674). Some “new” documents reveal him assisting that shipmasters’ corporation in its business. In this work, he was helping to protect a charity, shoring up a corporate bulwark against the rising tide of Court interest; he was soon to lament in An Account of the Growth of Popery and Arbitrary Government (1677). At issue was the drafting of letters rejecting a claim by the Lord Maynard, a prominent courtier who, with the support of James Duke of York and of Charles II, sought the reversion of the Ballastage Office. That lucrative office was a major resource for the London Trinity House, and one which fuller profits it was reluctant to concede. Whatever Marvell's own observation of decorum, the heavy correction of his initial draughts shows his more abrupt style coming under review, with a more flourishing courtliness characterizing the final letters sent by the group. |
| |
Keywords: | Marvell secretary letters decorum Trinity House Court |
|
|