John Pollexfen Bastard
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John Pollexfen Bastard (18 September 1756 – 4 April 1816) was a British Tory politician.
Member of Parliament for Devonshire from 1784, he stood down in 1812 and was succeeded by his son, Edmund, who held the seat until 1830.
According to the Oxford Companion to Children's Literature, Bastard indirectly inspired the familiar form of the children's rhyme "Old Mother Hubbard..." after instructing its author Sarah Catherine Martin (his sister in law) to "run away and write one of your stupid little rhymes."
Bastard owned several houses and large tracts of land in western England including his main residence Kitley House.
He can be spotted in Karl Anton Hickel's William Pitt addressing the House of Commons on the French Declaration of War, 1793 in the collection of the National Portrait Gallery (England).
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Parliament of Great Britain | ||
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Preceded by John Rolle and John Parker |
Member of Parliament for Devonshire 1784–1800 (with John Rolle, to 1796; Sir Lawrence Palk, from 1796) |
Succeeded by (self in Parliament of the United Kingdom) |
Parliament of the United Kingdom | ||
Preceded by (self in Parliament of Great Britain) |
Member of Parliament for Devonshire 1801–1816 (with Sir Lawrence Palk, to 1812; Sir Thomas Dyke Acland, from 1812) |
Succeeded by Sir Thomas Dyke Acland and Edmund Pollexfen Bastard |