[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 lordship"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.