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2ND VISCOUNT See also: English statesman, second son of the 1st Viscount Melbourne, by his See also: marriage with the daughter of See also: Sir See also: Ralph Milbanke, See also: bart., was See also: born on the 15th of See also: March 1779
.
His
See also: father, Peniston Lamb (1748-1829), was the son of Sir See also: Matthew Lamb, See also: hart
.
(d
.
1768), who made a large See also: fortune out of the See also: law, and married See also: Miss See also: Coke of Melbourne See also: Hall; in 1770 he was made baron and in 1781 Viscount Melbourne in the Irish
See also: peerage, and in 1815 was created an English peer
.
After completing his course at Trinity See also: College, Cambridge, See also: William Lamb studied law at the university of
See also: Glasgow, and was called to the See also: bar in 1804
.
In 18o5 he married Lady See also: Caroline See also: Ponsonby (1785-1828), daughter of the 3rd See also: earl of See also: Bessborough
.
She was, however, separated from him in 1825
.
Lady Caroline Lamb acquired some fame as a novelist by her See also: romance of Glenarvon, which was published anonymously in 1816 and was afterwards (1865) re-issued under the title of The Fatal Passion
.
On entering parliament in 18o6 the Hon
.
William Lamb (as See also: Lord Melbourne then was) joined the opposition under See also: Fox, of whom he was an ardent admirer; but his Liberal tendencies were never decided, and he not infrequently supported Lord Liverpool during that statesman's long tenure of office
.
During the See also: short See also: ministry of Canning in 1827 he was chief secretary for See also: Ireland, but he afterwards for a See also: time adhered to the small remnant of the party who supported the duke of Wellington
.
The influence of Melbourne as a politician See also: dates from his succeeding to the peerage in 1829
.
Disagreeing with the duke of Wellington on the question of See also: parliamentary reform, he entered the ministry of See also: Grey, as home secretary in 183o
.
For the duties of this office at such a critical time he was deficient in insight and energy, but his See also: political success was See also: independent of his official capacity; and when the ministry of Grey was wrecked on the Irish question in See also: July 1834 Melbourne was chosen to succeed him as See also: prime See also: minister
.
In See also: November following he had to give place to a Conservative ministry under Peel; but he resumed office in See also: April 1835, and remained prime minister till 1841
.
He died at Melbourne See also: House, See also: Derbyshire, on the 24th of November 1848
.
Lord Melbourne was without the qualification of See also: attention to details, and he never displayed those brilliant talents which often See also: form a substitute for more solid acquirements
.
Though he possessed a See also: fine and flexible See also: voice, his manner as a See also: speaker was ineffective, and his speeches were generally See also: ill-arranged and destitute of oratorical point
.
His political See also: advancement was due to his See also: personal popularity
.
He had a thorough knowledge of the private and indirect motives which influence politicians, and his genial attractive manner, easy temper and vivacious, if occasionally &arse, wit helped to confer on him a social distinction which led many to take for granted his See also: eminence as a statesman
.
His favourite dictum in politics was, " Why not leave it alone?" His relations with See also: women gave opportunity
MELBOURNE
for See also: criticism though not open See also: scandal; but the See also: action brought against him in 1836 by Mr See also: George Chapple See also: Norton in regard to the famous Mrs Caroline Norton (q.v.) was deservedly unsuccessful
.
The most notable and estimable feature of his political conduct was his relation to See also: Queen See also: Victoria (q.v.), whom he initiated into the duties of See also: sovereign with the most delicate tact and the most paternal and conscientious care
.
Melbourne was succeeded as 3rd viscount by his See also: brother, See also: Frederick See also: James Lamb (1782-1853), who was
See also: British ambassador to Vienna from 1831 to 1841
.
On the 3rd viscount's See also: death the titles became See also: extinct, but the estates passed to his See also: sister Emily Mary (1787-1869), the wife of Lord Palmerston
.
See W . McC . Torrens,See also: Memoirs of Lord Melbourne (1878) ; Lloyd Sanders, Lord Melbourne's Papers (1889) ; A
.
Hayward's essay (from the Quarterly Review, 1878) in " Eminent Statesmen " (188o)
.
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