MISCELLANEOUS MISALLIANCES.
The London correspondent of the "New York Times writes:—" The numerous family of the Duke of Argyle will soon be so composed as to include within its widely extending limits members of almost every grade of English society. His eldest son, the Marquis of Lome, is married to a daughter of the Queen of England. His second son is a wine merchant, an occupation always held in considerable honor among the Scotch, in memory, no doubt, of the time when only families of some importance could itock their cellars with wine, and when the wine merchant was often the proprietor of vineyards in France and Spain. Thaty however, does not alter the fact that the Duke's second son is in the wine trade. His third son is a tea dealer, a merchant — not a grocer selling tea retail across the counter, but a dealer in lea all the same. ; One of the commercial members of the family, Lord Walter Campbell—whether the tea dealer or the wine irerchant I forget-r-is^bout to marry Miss Milne, a daught££4t^a very rich manufacturer, who began life as a workman, and whose litersry education has been sadly neglected. The Duke will thus find himself in the interesting position of being allied to the Royal Family on the one hand, to the laboring classes on the other; and he is already connected, through both his younger sons, with the wholesale com" merce of the country. To put the matter in yet another ond more striking light, the mother of his eldest daughter-in-law will be the Queen; the mother of his youngest daughter a sort of Mrs. Malopr*>p, accustomed to commit the unpardonable offence of 'murdering the Queen's English.' Will Queen Victoria and the lady who habitually defaces her Majesty's word coinage meet? And how, in any case, will the two daughteig in-law get on together? Miss Milne will suddenly find herberself connected very closely with the H oval Family of England, and not very remotely with those of Prussia and Denmark, and Eussia. Her future husband is brother to the Marquis of Lornc, who is brother-in-law of the Princess' of Prussia, the Prince of Wales, and the Duke of Edinburgh, whose wife is sister-in-law of the Princess of Wales, and the Duchess of Edinburgh. What, it has been asked, will Eussia, Prussia, and Denmark say to his marriage? It is difficult to answer the question all at once. When, however, the Vicar of Wakefield's son published his volume of paradoxes, and was afterwards asked by his father ' what the world said to his paradoxes?' 'The world,' replied the candid young man, • said nothing to my paradoxes." And that, I fancy, is the sort of answer 'Eussia, Prussia, and Denmark' would give, if consulted on the subject of Lord Walter Campbell's marriage*
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Thames Star, Volume VI, Issue 1792, 30 September 1874, Page 3
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466MISCELLANEOUS MISALLIANCES. Thames Star, Volume VI, Issue 1792, 30 September 1874, Page 3
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