As a bishop he was certainly quite on a level with the standard of his age. A somewhat extensive collection of his letters existing in manuscript proves him to have been a good, sensible, practical man of business. In his religious views he was strongly opposed to
Calvinism, and did not scruple to express freely his dislike of passages in the
Articles and
Homilies which appeared to favour those tenets. He fully shared in the suspicion which in that age of formality attached to the term "
enthusiasm," which he vehemently denounced, while he was equally ardent in defence of what he styled "the decent services and rational doctrines of the church of England." Noble manners, an engaging disposition, affable and condescending address, a genial and good-humoured bearing, even if some allowance is made for partiality in description, make up an attractive portrait. His hospitality was generous, even to excess, and if the gossip of the day is to be credited his own example did not place any severe restraint on the clergy who gathered round his table. On his death Horace Walpole speaks of him as "a sensible, worldly man, but much addicted to his bottle." His son more guardedly records that "wherever he lived hospitality presided; wherever he was present elegance, festivity, and good humour were sure to be found." His very failings were those of a "heart warm even to impetuosity." His open-handed, generous character was manifested in the splendid additions he made to the archiepiscopal
palace at
Bishopthorpe, where he also erected a new gateway, ornamented the chapel at great cost, and rebuilt the parish church in the taste of the day. It deserves notice that, in an age when the fine arts suffered from prevalent neglect, the archbishop proved himself a liberal patron of English artists. ==Writings==