Fulke Greville (1717âÂÂ1806) of Wilbury House, Newton Toney, Wiltshire, England, was an English landowner, diplomat and writer.
He was the son of Algernon Greville and Mary Somerset, daughter and coheiress of Lord Arthur Somerset, the youngest son of Henry Somerset, 1st Duke of Beaufort. His father was a son of Fulke Greville, 5th Baron Brooke.
He was schooled at Winchester College from 1727 to 1733. He also attended Brasenose College, Oxford.
His wife was the poet Frances Greville, daughter and coheir of James Macartney, Irish MP for Longford and Granard and his wife Catherine Coote. They eloped on 26 January 1748. They had several children, including:
He served as Sheriff of Wiltshire in 1744, and as Member of Parliament for Monmouth Boroughs from 1747 to 1754.
In 1765, he was appointed envoy extraordinary to the Elector of Bavaria and Minister Plenipotentiary to the Imperial Diet of Ratisbon.
He was most noted as the author of Maxims, Characters and Reflections (1756), which went through multiple editions.
He also wrote poetry, including Soliloquy in a Thatched Building (London: Faulder, 1787), of which the second part was Reflection: A Poem in Four Cantos (London: Robinson, 1790).
James Boswell thought that Greville's book of Maxims was "entitled to much more praise than it has received." Hester Thrale wrote that "Greville draws Prose Characters incomparably well; that Man's book of Maxims &c. has not had Credit enough in the World."