Including the Time between ? adhere July the 22d, and December the 30th, 1820, THỊ
Printed and Sold by WILLIAM BENBOW, 269, Strand.
A Letter to Lord Castlereagh, on the refusal of the Queen's Plate. 2. A Letter to the King on the treat- ment of the Qneen.
8. A Letter to the Earl of Liverpool on the approaching Trial of the Queen, &c.
4. A Letter to the Queen, on the state of the King's Dominions, &c. &c. 8. A letter to the Middle Classes of People, on the Trial of the Queen.
0. To the Clergy of the Church of England, on their conduct towards the Queen,
7. A Letter to the Queen, tendering a dvice.
8. A Letter to the Reformers on the Cause of the Persecutions carried on against the Queen, on the man- ner of spending public money, and on Lord John Russel and the Whigs. 9. An Answer to the Solicitor-Gene- ral's Speech against her Majesty, 10. To the Weaver Boys of Lanca- shire: things to laugh at and things to remember.
11 A-Letter to Parson Cunningham on his letter to Mr Whitbread. 12. A Letter to Mr. Brougham, on his neglect of duty in the defence of her Majesty.
13. A Letter to the Attorney-General, a comparison between his assertions and his evidence.
20. A Lettter to Lord Folkestone on his letter to the People of Berkshire, RUMP CONSPIRACY." To the Electors of Westminster, on the Trial in the Court of King's Bench, of Cleary against Cobbett. 22. To the Electors of Westminster, on the Trial, Wright v. Cobbett, and on the late Westminster Meet- ing.
23. Letter II. to Earl Grey, on the obstacles to a change of Ministry; on the Speech of the American President, and on the prevailing distresses of the Country.
24. To the Reformers, on the Whig Manifesto just issued at Edinburgh; and on the precautions to be taken against the issuers,
Ferguson, General, 82. Freeling, 1912.
Folkestone, Lord Viscount, 1347.
Grenfell, Pascoe. 1599,
Grey, Lord, 217, 1167, 1975, 1560,
Grenville, Lord, 1938.
Gell, Sir W. 387, 392, 649.
Gooch. T. S. 818.
Guildford, Lord, 853,
Brougham, Mr. 300, 457, 1044, 1636, | Hasear, John, 29.
Russell, Lord John, 167, 233, 513, White, Mr. 1548.
LONDON, SATURDAY, JULY 22, 1820. [Price, 68.
On the Refusal of the Plate to the Queen; and on other mal- ters connected with the present crisis of Public Affairs.
London, July 20, 1820. CASTLEREAGH,
[deed, for not thinking this; for, if they had not sense enough to foresee it, I told it them; and, they ought to have believed me. However, let them receive the consequences.
I am now about to address you upon the subject of the Queen's plate; but, by way of preface, let me talk to you a lit- tle about the state, to which you and your colleagues and pre-
It is now about five years decessors have brought this for- since I addressed my last letter to merly flourishing, happy, and you. You were then what is vul-free country. The Queen's ar- garly called cock-a-hoop with rival has produced a great deal your triumphs on the Continent. of agitation and of turmoil; but You had just then been received it has operated, also, as a grand in the Honourable House with diversion, in favour of you and even clapping of hands. The your colleagues; and though Boroughmen were then in high your other troubles will return glee. They thought that all by and bye with redoubled was settled for ever! Miserable force, the diversion accords with miscalculation! Little did they your system, which is a system expect that which has since built upon the maxim, that, come to pass; little did they" sufficient unto the day is the imagine that five years of that" evil thereof;" a system which glorious peace, which had been never looks beyond its nose; a atchieved by twenty-two years system of shifts, expedients, and of glorious war, would open to blunders. Such a system gains them a dismal abyss instead of a by every thing, which, though paradise. They were fools, in-only for a moment, turns the
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