She worked for
Mary of Modena, who had just married
James, Duke of York, heir presumptive to the thrones of England, Scotland, and Ireland. This eventually led to an affair with him. She was bewildered at having been chosen by James. "It cannot be my beauty for he must see I have none," she remarked incredulously. "And it cannot be my wit, for he has not enough to know that I have any." James in fact was often attracted to women like Catherine and
Arabella Churchill who were generally considered plain, if not ugly; his brother King
Charles II once joked that his confessor must impose these mistresses on him as a
penance. After his accession, James yielded to pressure from his confessor Fr.
Bonaventure Giffard, backed by the
2nd Earl of Sunderland and several Catholic councillors, and put her away for a time. After the
Glorious Revolution when Queen
Mary II refused to receive her at court, Catherine inquired how Mary, who had broken the commandment to honour her father, was in any way better than Catherine, who had broken the commandment against
adultery. At the court of
George I she met
Charles II's mistress
Louise de Kérouaille, Duchess of Portsmouth, and
William III's mistress
Elizabeth Hamilton, Countess of Orkney, and exclaimed "God! Who would have thought that we three whores should meet here." At George's
coronation in 1714 when the
Archbishop of Canterbury,
Thomas Tenison, ritually asked if the people accepted their new king, Catherine, observing the number of soldiers on duty, asked caustically "Does the old fool think that anyone will say No?" She died in
Bath on 26 October 1717. By James II, Lady Dorchester had a daughter,
Lady Catherine Darnley (died 1743), who married
James Annesley, 3rd Earl of Anglesey, and after his death married
John Sheffield, 1st Duke of Buckingham and Normanby. Through Catherine Darnley she was the ancestress of the
Barons Mulgrave and of the
Mitford sisters. Through her son, Charles, Lord Portmore, she was the grandmother of Elizabeth Collier, wife of Dr
Erasmus Darwin, the physician, scientist, poet and grandfather of
Charles Darwin. ==See also==