Goldsworthy served with Lord Herbert in the regiment commanded by Lord Pembroke, and was returned for Wilton when Herbert was appointed vice-chamberlain. ‘Though Goldsworthy was very proper for the time’, wrote Pembroke to Herbert on 21 Sept. 1787,
Goldsworthy was for many years an equerry in the royal household, ‘warmly and faithfully attached to the King and all the royal family’.
After all one’s labours, riding, and walking, and standing, and bowing—what a life it is? Well! it’s honour! that’s one comfort; it’s all honour! royal honour!—one has the honour to stand till one has not a foot left; and to ride till one’s stiff, and to walk till one’s ready to drop,—and then one makes one’s lowest bow, d’ye see, and blesses one’s self with joy for the honour.
But she also describes him as a man of moods whose ‘sport and humour ... ceases wholly if the smallest thing happens to disconcert him’. A brother officer, Major J. Floyd, called him ‘a very good fellow’ and ‘a most excellent officer’.
He died 4 Jan. 1801.
