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[30] _Wilberforce Correspondence_, i. 219.
[31] _Annual Register_, 1793, 113.
[32] _Parl. Hist._, x.x.x. 810.
[33] Walpole's _Life of Lord John Russell_, i. 56.
[34] The first exception to this rule was Mr. Smith the banker, who was made Earl Carrington in 1797.
[35] Scottish borough members were exempt. But Scottish boroughs were the most rotten of all rotten boroughs. An English county member must have 600 a year, a borough member 300. The qualifications were often fict.i.tious.
[36] _Annual Register_, 1796, 52.
[37] _Parl. Hist._, xxii. 422.
[38] _State Trials_, xxiii. 229.
[39] Speech on Seditious Societies, 17th November, 1795.
[40] Londonderry to Brougham, 31st August, 1829, _Castlereagh Correspondence_, i. 121.
[41] Speech on _Revolutionary Principles_, 13th December, 1792. Compare the argument which is used to-day against the enfranchis.e.m.e.nt of working women.
Toryism knows no s.e.x.
[42] Speech on _Bull-baiting_, 24th May, 1802.
[43] _Ibid._
[44] _Speech_, 24th April, 1807.
[45] _Parl. Hist._, x.x.xiv. 162, 165 (1798). The publication of reports of debates began in 1771, or rather, was then first permitted.
[46] _Hansard_, I. xli. 1045 (1819).
[47] _Hansard_, I. x.x.xviii. 1171 (1818).
[48] _Hansard_, I. xli. 388 (1819).
[49] _Hansard_, I. xli. 914. The resolutions were no more "disgraceful"
than those of the ordinary Trade Union Congress of to-day.
[50] Arnould's _Life of Denman_, i. 253.
[51] In 1817 no less than 1,200 persons were sent to prison for offences against the Game Laws.
[52] _Hansard_, I., x.x.xix. 1435, 1439.
[53] Beaufoy's speech, _Annual Register_, 1787.
[54] Burke's _Memoirs of the English Catholics_, ii. 459, 466.
[55] _Speeches: On Repeal of the Test Act_, 2nd March, 1790.
[56] _Strictures on Female Education_ (1799), i. 106.
[57] _Legacy to Young Ladies_ (1826).
[58] _Legacy to his Daughters_ (1784).
[59] Lucy Aikin's _Memoir of Mrs. Barbauld_ (1825), xvi.
[60] See further, the writer's _Emanc.i.p.ation of English Women_, ch. 3.
[61] _Speeches_, 26th May, 1797.
[62] _Hansard_, I. xli. 391.
[63] _Parl. Hist._, x.x.xi. 1384.
[64] Fitzmaurice's _Life of Shelburne_, ii. 367.
[65] _Parl. Hist._, x.x.xiv. 416.
[66] _Parl. Hist._, xix. 1100.
[67] _Leviathan_, ii. ch. xvii.
[68] _On Civil Government_, ch. viii.
[69] _Letter to Sir Hercules Langrishe_ (1792). Compare his _Speech at Bristol previous to the Election_ (1780).
[70] _Speeches_, vol. vi. 310 (23rd March, 1797). Compare Granville, in the _Annual Register_, 1808, 196.
[71] Burke, _French Revolution_.
[72] _Parl. Hist._, x.x.xii. 961 (1796).
[73] _Parl. Hist._, x.x.xiv. 1429.
[74] Fitzmaurice's _Life of Shelburne_, iii. 88, 435. His ideas on education he tried to enforce on his own estates. But "the clergy opposed his lords.h.i.+p's intentions, lest the children should become Dissenters, although it was engaged that the children of Church people should go to Church with their parents." _Ibid._, 438 n.
[75] Fitzmaurice, iii. 497, 498.
[76] _Ibid._, ii. 329.
[77] _Ibid._, 360.
[78] _Ibid._, iii. 438.