Glynne, the youngest Member elected to the Commons in this period, was intended for the church and to succeed his maternal uncle George Neville Greville to the lucrative living of Hawarden to which the Glynnes, as lords of the manor, had the right of appointment.
He [the bishop] says if he accepts it only while his brother is sheriff, and gets the Chiltern Hundreds the day he [Stephen] goes out of office, he (if he was in his diocese) would not object in any way to ordaining him. The worst that could happen would be to delay his taking deacon’s orders a few months, which would make no difference as to the time of his becoming priest, and that no bishop could object to ordaining him if he makes no violent radical speech on the hustings or in Parliament ... The bishop said Henry being so young, and there being so long a time after he leaves Parliament before he is of age for orders is all in his favour of being in Parliament for this short period.
Glynne of Hawarden mss 5402.
A ‘baby in apron strings’, his candidature was made known to a select few on the eve of the election, and he was nominated and returned unopposed with great pomp, 22 Sept.
He will hardly submit to an academical examination after his political initiation. He will find the latter [by] a good deal the most difficult of task of the two in these desperate times. He intends, however, I fancy, to reverse the French proverb and sauter pour mieux simuler and have you to bear the brunt of the storms that are gathering on the political horizon.
Glynne of Hawarden mss 5408.
Though delayed, the return arrived in time for Glynne to honour his election promise by voting for Lord Ebrington’s motion of confidence in Lord Grey’s ministry, 10 Oct. 1831; and being summoned by the leader of the House Lord Althorp, he divided for the revised reform bill at its second reading, 17 Dec. 1831.
