A Complete Collection of the Genuine Papers, Letters, &c. in the Case of John Wilkes, Esq. Elected Knight of the Shire for the County of Middlesex March XXVIII, MDCCLXVIII.1769 - Great Britain - 261 pages |
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Page 19
... peace constables and all other his ma- jefty's officers civil and military and loving fubjects whom it may concern are to be aid- ing and affifting to you as there fhall be occa- fion and for fo doing this fhall be your war- rant Given ...
... peace constables and all other his ma- jefty's officers civil and military and loving fubjects whom it may concern are to be aid- ing and affifting to you as there fhall be occa- fion and for fo doing this fhall be your war- rant Given ...
Page 29
... peace , to leave fo excellent a corps in that perfect harmony , which has from the beginning fubfifted . I have the honour to be , With unfeigned respect , My Lord , Tower , May 5 , 1763 . Your lordship's most obedient , and most humble ...
... peace , to leave fo excellent a corps in that perfect harmony , which has from the beginning fubfifted . I have the honour to be , With unfeigned respect , My Lord , Tower , May 5 , 1763 . Your lordship's most obedient , and most humble ...
Page 31
... peace and fecurity in his own houfe , unviolated by king's meffengers , and the arbi- trary mandates of an overbearing fecretary of • state . .py I will no longer delay your juftice . The na- tion is impatient to hear , nor can be safe ...
... peace and fecurity in his own houfe , unviolated by king's meffengers , and the arbi- trary mandates of an overbearing fecretary of • state . .py I will no longer delay your juftice . The na- tion is impatient to hear , nor can be safe ...
Page 56
... peace against the said Alexander Dun , not out of hatred or malice , but merely for the prefervation of his life and perfon from danger . JOHN WILKES , MATTHEW BROWN , MATHIAS DARLY . The deponent John Wilkes fworn at his houfe in Great ...
... peace against the said Alexander Dun , not out of hatred or malice , but merely for the prefervation of his life and perfon from danger . JOHN WILKES , MATTHEW BROWN , MATHIAS DARLY . The deponent John Wilkes fworn at his houfe in Great ...
Page 59
... peace against the said Alexander Dun , not out of hatred or malice , but merely for the pre- fervation of his life and perfon from danger . Thefe are therefore to will and require , and in his majesty's name , ftrictly to charge and ...
... peace against the said Alexander Dun , not out of hatred or malice , but merely for the pre- fervation of his life and perfon from danger . Thefe are therefore to will and require , and in his majesty's name , ftrictly to charge and ...
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Common terms and phrases
affured againſt almoft anfwer aſked Auguft Aylesbury becauſe cafe caufe cauſe confequence conftitution declared defired deponent Earl England facred faid fame Family Compact fatisfaction favour fecretaries fecurity feem feen fent fervice feveral fhall fhew fhould fince firft firſt folicitor fome foon fovereign fpirit Francis Barlow friends ftate ftill fubject fubmit fuch fuffer fuperior fupport fure gentlemen Halifax himſelf honour houfe houſe humble fervant infifted infolent interefts John Wilkes juftice King King's Bench laft leaft letter liberty London lord Bristol Lord Bute Lord Chatham lord Egremont Lord Halifax Lord Mansfield Lordship Majefty Majefty's meaſures Middlefex minifter miniftry moft moſt muft muſt myſelf nation North Briton Number obferve occafion outlawry paper parliament penfion perfon Philip Carteret pleaſed prefent publiſhed reafon refpect ſaid Secker ſhall Spain ſtate Talbot thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe tion Tueſday uſe warrant Webb Wilkes's Wilkes's addrefs Wincheſter wou'd
Popular passages
Page 131 - ... on me, whom they imagined to be the principal author of bringing to the public view their ignorance, insufficiency, and treachery to your Majesty and to the nation.
Page 12 - I should never resolve him that question, till he made out the right of putting it, and that if I could have entertained any other idea, I was too well bred to have given his lordship and colonel Berkeley the trouble of coming to Bagshot.
Page 49 - Chatham has known the fweets of private friendfhip, and the fine feelings of humanity, as little as even Lord Mansfield. They are both formed to be admired, not beloved. A proud, infolent, overbearing, ambitious man is always full of the ideas of his own importance, and vainly imagines himfelf fuperior to the equality neceffary among real friends, in all the moments of true enjoyment.
Page 134 - I blufh again at the recolleftion that it has been at any time, and in any way, brought to the public eye, and drawn from the obfcurity in which it remained under my roof. Twelve copies of a fmall part of it had been printed in my houfe at my own private prefs.
Page 17 - I owe this to your apprehenfion of an action, not to your love of juftice ; and in that light, if I can believe your lordfhips' afTurances, the whole will be returned to me.
Page 188 - Easter week; but this ignominious act has not yet disgraced the nation in the London Gazette. The ministry are not ashamed of doing the thing in private; they are only afraid of the publication. Was it a tender regard for the honour of the late king, or of his present majesty, that invited to court lord George Sackville, in...
Page 173 - Jennings it was fhewn to Mr. Farmer, Mr. Faden, and the Rev. Mr. Kidgell ; that the firft application made to this deponent was by Farmer, who came, as he pretended, on his own curiofity, to fee the reft of the poem called An...
Page 24 - AN order of the houfe of commons is come to Mr. Hawkins and me, to attend Mr. Wilkes from time to time in order to obferve the progrefs of the cure, and to make a report to the houfe, together with you and Mr. Graves. You will oblige us by acquainting Mr. Wilkes with this ; and if you will let us know at what time you intend to fee Mr. Wilkes on Monday, we will be ready to meet you there. Mr. Hawkins defires that the appointment may be for fome hours after twelve.
Page 22 - Martin's making his i : mediate efcape, and no creature fhould know from Mr. Wilkes how the affair happened. Upon this they parted ; but Mr. Martin came up again in two or three minutes to Mr. Wilkes, offering him a fecond time his affiftance ; but Mr.