Soon after leaving Cambridge, Walpole travelled in Greece.[1] On returning to Cambridge he presented a marble dramatic mask sculpture from the theatre at Stratonicea to the University Library.[4]
Walpole was ordained deacon in 1808, and priest the following year.[3] In 1809 he became rector of Itteringham, Norfolk, in 1815 rector of Tivetshall, Norfolk, and in 1828 rector of Christ Church, Marylebone, Westminster. He held Itteringham and Christ Church for the rest of his life. He died in Harewood Street, London, on 16 April 1856. He had estates at Carrow Abbey, near Norwich, and at Scole Lodge, Osmundeston, Norfolk.[1]
Works
In 1817 Walpole published Memoirs relating to European and Asiatic Turkey (2nd edit. 1818). He edited Travels in various Countries of the East (2 vols., 1820), consisting mainly of unpublished papers written by John Bacon Sawrey Morritt, John Sibthorp, and Philip Hunt. There were contributions from other travellers, including:
Melite Britannis subacta (1801) prize-winning Greek ode at Cambridge
Comicorum Græcorum Fragmenta (1805), with some notes by Richard Porson[15]
Isabel, a collection of verse translations, which was criticised in the Edinburgh Review
Specimens of scarce Translations of the seventeenth century from the Latin Poets (1805). This includes Walpole's Greek epitaph for the grave of John Tweddell in the Hephaestion.[16] The Eclectic Review, also critical of the work, translated the epitaph.[17]
Essay on the Misrepresentations of certain Infidel Writers (1812)[18]
He completed the sixth and final volume of Edward Daniel Clarke's Travels after the author's death.[19]
Family
On 6 February 1811 Walpole married Caroline Frances Hyde, the youngest daughter of John Hyde. They had two sons and two daughters, including the barrister Reginald Robert Walpole.[1][3][20]