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Chemistry The Central Science 13th Edition Brown Solutions Manual

Chemistry The Central Science 13th


Edition Brown Solutions Manual
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Chemistry The Central Science 13th Edition Brown Solutions Manual

Chapter 2. Atoms, Molecules, and Ions


Media Resources
Important Figures and Tables: Section:
Figure 2.4 Cathode-Ray Tube with Perpendicular 2.2 The Discovery of Atomic Structure
Magnetic and Electric Fields
Figure 2.5 Millikan’s Oil Drop Experiment to 2.2 The Discovery of Atomic Structure
Measure the Charge of the Electron
Figure 2.7 Behavior of Alpha (), Beta () and 2.2 The Discovery of Atomic Structure
Gamma() Rays in an Electric Field
Figure 2.9 Rutherford’s -Scattering Experiment 2.2 The Discovery of Atomic Structure
Figure 2.10 The Structure of the Atom 2.3 The Modern View of Atomic Structure
Figure 2.11 A Mass Spectrometer 2.4 Atomic Weights
Figure 2.14 Periodic Table of Elements 2.5 The Periodic Table
Figure 2.18 Predictable Charges of Some Common 2.7 Ions and Ionic Compounds
Ions
Figure 2.19 Formation of an Ionic Compound 2.7 Ions and Ionic Compounds
Figure 2.20 Elements Essential to Life 2.7 Ions and Ionic Compounds
Figure 2.22 Procedure for Naming Anions 2.8 Naming Inorganic Compounds
Figure 2.24 How Anion Names and Acid Names 2.8 Naming Inorganic Compounds
Relate

Animations: Section:
Multiple Proportions 2.1 The Atomic Theory of Matter
Millikan Oil Drop Experiment 2.2 The Discovery of Atomic Structure
Rutherford Experiment: Nuclear Atom 2.2 The Discovery of Atomic Structure

Activities: Section:
Law of Multiple Proportions 2.1 The Atomic Theory of Matter
Separation of Alpha, Beta, and Gamma Rays 2.2 The Discovery of Atomic Structure
Isotopes of Hydrogen 2.3 The Modern View of Atomic Structure
Mass Spectrometer 2.4 Atomic Weights
Periodic Table 2.5 The Periodic Table
Representations of Methane 2.6 Molecules and Molecular Compounds
Naming Cations 2.8 Naming Inorganic Compounds
Naming Anions 2.8 Naming Inorganic Compounds
Polyatomic Ions 2.8 Naming Inorganic Compounds
Ionic Compounds 2.8 Naming Inorganic Compounds

3-D Models: Section:


Methane 2.9 Some Simple Organic Compounds
Ethane 2.9 Some Simple Organic Compounds
Propane 2.9 Some Simple Organic Compounds
Methanol 2.9 Some Simple Organic Compounds
Ethanol 2.9 Some Simple Organic Compounds
1-Propanol 2.9 Some Simple Organic Compounds
2-Propanol 2.9 Some Simple Organic Compounds

Copyright © 2015 Pearson Education, Inc.

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16 Chapter 2
VCL Simulations: Section:
Thompson Cathode-Ray Experiment 2.2 The Discovery of Atomic Structure
Millikan Oil Drop Experiment 2.2 The Discovery of Atomic Structure
Rutherford’s Backscattering Experiment 2.2 The Discovery of Atomic Structure
Names and Formulas of Ionic Compounds 2.8 Naming Inorganic Compounds

Other Resources
Further Readings: Section:
Analogical Demonstration 2.1 The Atomic Theory of Matter
A Millikan Oil Drop Analogy 2.2 The Discovery of Atomic Structure
Marie Curie's Doctoral Thesis: Prelude to a 2.2 The Discovery of Atomic Structure
Nobel Prize
Bowling Balls and Beads: A Concrete Analogy 2.2 The Discovery of Atomic Structure
to the Rutherford Experiment
The Discovery of the Electron, Proton, and 2.2 The Discovery of Atomic Structure
Neutron
The Curie-Becquerel Story 2.2 The Discovery of Atomic Structure
Isotope Separation 2.3 The Modern View of Atomic Structure
The Origin of Isotope Symbolism 2.3 The Modern View of Atomic Structure
Relative Atomic Mass and the Mole: A Concrete 2.4 Atomic Weights
Analogy to Help Students Understand These
Abstract Concepts
Revising Molar Mass, Atomic Mass, and Mass 2.4 Atomic Weights
Number: Organizing, Integrating, and
Sequencing Fundamental Chemical Concepts
Using Monetary Analogies to Teach Average 2.4 Atomic Weights
Atomic Mass
Pictorial Analogies IV: Relative Atomic Weights 2.4 Atomic Weights
Mass Spectrometry for the Masses 2.4 Atomic Weights
Periodic Tables of Elemental Abundance 2.5 The Periodic Table
A Second Note on the Term “Chalcogen” 2.5 The Periodic Table
The Proper Place for Hydrogen in the Periodic 2.5 The Periodic Table
Table
An Educational Card Game for Learning Families 2.5 The Periodic Table
of Chemical Elements
The Periodic Table: Key to Past “Elemental” 2.5 The Periodic Table
Discoveries—A New Role in the Future?
Teaching Inorganic Nomenclature: A Systematic 2.8 Naming Inorganic Compounds
Approach
Nomenclature Made Practical: Student Discovery 2.8 Naming Inorganic Compounds
of the Nomenclature
ChemOkey: A Game to Reinforce Nomenclature 2.8 Naming Inorganic Compounds
Flow Chart for Naming Inorganic Compounds 2.8 Naming Inorganic Compounds
Using Games to Teach Chemistry: An Annotated 2.8 Naming Inorganic Compounds
Bibliography
A Mnemonic for Oxy-Anions 2.8 Naming Inorganic Compounds
The Proper Writing of Ionic Charges 2.8 Naming Inorganic Compounds

Copyright © 2015 Pearson Education, Inc.


Atoms, Molecules, and Ions 17
Live Demonstrations: Section:
Turning Plastic into Gold: An Analogy to 2.2 The Discovery of Atomic Structure
Demonstrate Rutherford Gold Foil Experiment
Dramatizing Isotopes: Deuterated Ice Cubes Sink 2.3 The Modern View of Atomic Structure

Copyright © 2015 Pearson Education, Inc.


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The Project Gutenberg eBook of London in the
Jacobite times, Volume II
This ebook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United
States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with
almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away
or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License
included with this ebook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you
are not located in the United States, you will have to check the
laws of the country where you are located before using this
eBook.

Title: London in the Jacobite times, Volume II

Author: Dr. Doran

Release date: November 6, 2023 [eBook #72050]

Language: English

Original publication: London: Richard Bentley & Son, 1877

Credits: Carol Brown, Susan Skinner and the Online Distributed


Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file
was produced from images generously made available
by The Internet Archive)

*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LONDON IN


THE JACOBITE TIMES, VOLUME II ***
LONDON

IN

THE JACOBITE TIMES

VOL. II.
LONDON: PRINTED BY
SPOTTISWOODE AND CO., NEW-STREET SQUARE
AND PARLIAMENT STREET
LONDON
IN

THE JACOBITE TIMES

BY

Dᴿ DORAN, F.S.A.

AUTHOR OF ‘TABLE TRAITS’ ‘QUEENS OF THE HOUSE OF HANOVER’


‘THEIR MAJESTIES’ SERVANTS’ ETC.

IN TWO VOLUMES

VOL. II.
LONDON
RICHARD BENTLEY & SON, NEW BURLINGTON STREET
Publishers in Ordinary to Her Majesty the Queen
1877

All rights reserved.


CONTENTS
OF

THE SECOND VOLUME.

CHAPTER I.
(1724-’25-’26-’27.)
PAGE
Loyal and Disloyal Printers—Sacheverel—His Death—A
new Toast—Bolingbroke—Bolingbroke’s Adversaries
—In the Lords’ House—Denunciations against him—
An Epigram—Fresh Intrigues—Political Writers—
Wharton, Boasting—Prince William, Duke of
Cumberland—In Kensington Gardens—Seaforth’s
Pardon—Robert Macgregor Campbell—Rob Roy’s
Letter to Wade—Rob Roy in Newgate—Rob Roy in
London—A Note of Alarm—Patriotic Jacobites—
Voltaire—The New Reign—Coronation—Prince
Frederick 1

CHAPTER II.
(1728 to 1732.)
Mist’s Journal—Lockhart of Carnwath—George II. and 27
Lockhart—The Jacobite Cause—Character of the
House of Commons—The King and Queen—
Atterbury weary of Exile—The Prince of Wales at
Church—The Morals and Manners of the Time—
Atterbury, on Mist—Thomson’s ‘Sophonisba’—Cibber
made Poet Laureate—Jacobite Hearne—A Jacobite
Threat—Difficulties in Professional Life—Death of
Defoe—‘Fall of Mortimer’—Duels and Sermons—
Young Lord Derwentwater—A Standing Army—The
Duke’s Grenadiers—General Roguery—Death of
Atterbury—Burial of Atterbury—At Scarborough—
Notorious Jacobites—The Earl of Derwentwater

CHAPTER III.
(1733 to 1740.)
Approaching Storm—Wyndham in Parliament—Political
Sermon—Stormy Debates—The Young Chevalier—
Lord Duffus—The Calves’ Head Club—The Calves’
Head Riot—The ‘30th of January’—Objectionable
Toasts—Foster, in the Old Jewry—The Queen and
the Artist—Chesterfield’s Wit—Scene in Westminster
Hall—Jacobites and Gin-Drinkers—The Stage
fettered—Fear of the Pretender—Walpole, on
Jacobites—Curious Discussion—Safety of the Royal
Family—‘Agamemnon’—The King, in Public—Political
Drama—Henry Pelham and the Jacobites—Jacobite
Prospects—Death of Wyndham 55

CHAPTER IV.
(1741 to 1744.)
Incidents in Parliament—Party Characteristics—On 82
Hounslow Heath—Tories not Jacobites—Condition of
Parties—In Leicester Fields—Awaking of Jacobites—
Chesterfield’s Opinions—King and Elector—Highland
Regiment in London—Desertion of the Men—March
of the Deserters—The Highlanders at Oundle—
Military Execution—Threatened Invasion—Confusion
—Preparations—Declaration of War—Letter from
Hurd—Public Feeling—Lady M. W. Montague—Carte,
the Nonjuror—Carte’s History of England—Various
Incidents—Lady Nithsdale

CHAPTER V.
(1745.)
‘Tancred and Sigismunda’—Political Drama—The young
Chevalier—Feeling in London—Hopes and Fears—
Horace Walpole’s Ideas—Divisions in Families—
Court and City—Varying Opinions—London Wit—The
Parliament—The Radcliffes—The London Jacobites
—The Venetian Ambassador—Monarch and Ministers
—News in private Letters—The London Trainbands—
Scenes at Court—The King’s Speech to the Guards—
Aspects of Society—French News of London—
Anxiety and Confidence—Johnson and Lord Gower—
Bolingbroke 108

CHAPTER VI.
(1746.)
War Criticism—Breaking an Officer—Rebel Prisoners—
London Mobs—Ambassadors’ Chapels—The Havoc
of War—Flying Reports—News of Culloden—A
popular Holiday—Carlyle and Smollett—‘Tears of
Scotland’—Indignation Verses 133

CHAPTER VII.
(1746.)
The Players—Sadler’s Wells and the New Wells— 146
Culloden on the Stage—Mrs. Woffington—The Press,
on Culloden—Savagery and Satire—The
Caricaturists—Pseudo-Portrait of Charles Edward—
The Duke of Ormond—Burial of Ormond—The
Question of Inhumanity—Instigators of Cruelty—The
Prisoners in London—The Duke in Aberdeen—
Looting—The Duke and his Plunder—A Human Head
—‘Sweet William’—Flattery

CHAPTER VIII.
(1746.)
Colonel Towneley—King’s Evidence—Towneley’s Trial
—Conviction—Captain Fletcher—The Manchester
Officers—‘Jemmy Dawson’—The Jacobite Press—
The Condemned Jacobites—Painful Partings—Within
Prison Walls—The Last Morning—Via Dolorosa—At
Kennington Common—Behaviour—Execution—
Heads and Bodies—Other Trials—A Mad Jacobite—
Sir John Wedderburn ‘Bishop’ Coppock 166

CHAPTER IX.
(1746.)
At the Whipping Posts—In Westminster Hall—
Preparations for the new Trials—The Lord High
Steward—The Spectators’ Gallery—Kilmarnock and
Cromartie—Balmerino—The Prosecution—Balmerino
and Murray—‘Guilty, upon my Honour!’—Kilmarnock’s
Apology—Cromartie’s Plea—Balmerino’s Defence—
Balmerino’s Conduct—George Selwyn—Kilmarnock’s
Principles—The Principles of Balmerino—Leniency of
the Government 188

CHAPTER X.
(1746.)
The Duke at Vauxhall—Opinion in the City—In the 207
Tower—Lord Cromartie—Lord Kilmarnock—On Tower
Hill—The Executions—Charles Radcliffe—The Trial—
Mr. Justice Foster—Conduct of Radcliffe—To
Kennington Common—Cibber’s ‘Refusal’—Execution
of Radcliffe—Lovat’s Progress—Hogarth’s Portrait of
Lovat—Arrival at the Tower—Rebels and Witnesses
—Tilbury Fort—French Idea—A London Elector’s Wit
—Trial of Lovat—Scene in Westminster Hall—Father
and Son—The Frasers—Murray of Boughton—
Murray’s Evidence—Cross Examination—The Verdict
—Gentleman Harry—The Death Warrant—Execution
—George Selwyn—Lovat’s Body—The White Horse,
Piccadilly—Jacobite Toasts—The Earl of Traquair—
Plotting and Pardoning—Æneas Macdonald—The
Countess of Derwentwater—Sergeant Smith—The
Jacobite’s Journal—Carte’s History of England—
Hume’s ‘History’—Jacobite Johnson—Johnson’s
Sympathies—Flora Macdonald—Flora’s Sons

CHAPTER XI.
(1748 to 1750.)
Depreciation of the Stuarts—The Government and the
Jacobites—Enlargement of Prisoners—In the Park
and on the Mall—The Statue in Leicester Square—An
Eccentric Jacobite—Gloomy Reports—The
Haymarket Theatre—Treasonable Pamphlets—
Murray and Lord Traquair—Political Meeting—Dr.
King’s Oration—The Earl of Bath—The Laureate’s
Ode—The Jacobite Muse—Prisons and Prisoners
—‘Defender of the Faith’—News for London 256

CHAPTER XII.
(1751 to 1761.)
Death of Great Personages—The New Heir to the 275
Throne—Lord Egmont on Jacobites—In both Houses
—Jacobite Healths—The Royal Family—
Parliamentary Anecdotes—Attempt to make
‘Perverts’—Dr. Archibald Cameron—Before the
Council—Trial of Cameron—The Doctor’s Jacobitism
—Charles Edward, a Protestant—Cameron’s Creed—
The Last Victim—In the Savoy—A Scene at
Richardson’s—Cameron’s Case—A Minor Offender—
Suspicion against the Duke—The Anti-Jacobite Press
—The City Gates

CHAPTER XIII.
(1751 to 1761.)
The old Chevalier and the Cardinal—Roman News in
London Papers—A Son of Rob Roy—Jacobite
Paragraphs—Hume’s ‘History’—At Rome—Hopes
and Interests—Illness of the old Chevalier—
Accession of George III.—King and People—Charles
Edward at Westminster 298

CHAPTER XIV.
(1744 to 1761.)
Charles Edward in Manchester—Miss Byrom’s Diary—
The Visit in 1748—The Visit in 1750—Dr. King and
the Chevalier—Memoranda—Further Memoranda—
Charles Edward’s Statement—The Visit in 1752-3—
Credibility of the Stories—Conflicting Statements—At
the Coronation—At the Banquet—George and
Charles Edward—A Disqualification—The
Protestantism of Charles Edward—Foundation of the
Story 310

CHAPTER XV.
(1761 to 1775.)
State of London—Good Feeling—A Jacobite Funeral—
Dr. Johnson’s Pension—Johnson’s View of it—His
Definition of a Jacobite—Death of the Duke of
Cumberland—Death of the old Chevalier—Funeral
Rites—George III. and Dr. Johnson—Johnson, on
George III.—Johnson’s Pension opposed—A 30th of
January Sermon—Debate on the Sermon—Marriage
of Charles Edward—Walpole, on the Marriage—The
Last Heads on Temple Bar—Dalrymple’s ‘Memoirs’—
Walpole’s Anti-Jacobitism—Anti-Ultramontanism
—‘The Happy Establishment’—Garrick’s Macbeth 328

CHAPTER XVI.
(1776 to 1826.)
A Plebiscite for the Stuarts—The Last of the Nonjuring
Bishops—The Jacobite Muse—Jacobite Johnson—
Boswell on Allegiance—A Jacobite Actress—Burns’s
‘Dream’—Burns on the Stuarts—The Count of Albany
—Robert Strange—Strange’s Adventures—Strange in
London—New Hopes—Strange at St. James’s—The
Jacobite Knighted—Sir Robert and Lady Strange—
Death of Charles Edward—The Countess of Albany
at Court—In the House of Lords—The Countess, on
English Society—Hanoverian Jacobites—Jacobite
Ballads—‘Henry the Ninth’—Hume’s History of the
Rebellion—A Jacobite Drama—The Drama Revised
—Satirical Ballad—Reversal of Attainders—Debate in
the Commons—A Transpontine Play—The Body of
James the Second—Ceremony at St. Germain—
Something New 351

CHAPTER XVII.
VICTORIA.
Old Jacobite Titles—More Restorations—The Cromartie 385
Title—Titles under Attainder—Fitz-Pretenders—
Admiral Allen’s Son and Grandsons—Working
through Literature—The Romance of the Story—‘Red
Eagle’—‘Tales of the Last Century’—The Lever of
Poetry—Poetical Politics—The Black Cockade—The
Allens in Edinburgh—The Succession to the Crown—
A Derwentwater at Dilston—Descent of the Claimant
—Obstacles in Pedigrees—John Sobieski Stuart—
The elder Son of ‘Red Eagle’—Stuart Alliances—
Fuller Particulars—The Stuart-d’Albanies—Jacobite
Lord Campbell—Lord Campbell, on old Judgments—
Time’s Changes—At Chelsea and Balmoral
LONDON
IN

THE JACOBITE TIMES.


CHAPTER I.

(1724-’25-’26-’27.)
singular illustration of the still partially
LOYAL AND
troubled times which followed is DISLOYAL
furnished by a proceeding of Samuel PRINTERS.
Negus, printer. In 1724 he published a
list of all the printers then exercising their craft in
London, and he most humbly laid it before Lord Viscount
Townshend; no doubt, for his guidance. The list is divided into four
parts. The first consists of those ‘known to be well affected to King
George.’ There are thirty-four of these ultra-loyal fellows, with Negus,
of course, among them. The second list is headed ‘Nonjurors;’ in
this, three names are entered, one of which is ‘Bowyer.’ In the third
list, headed, ‘said to be High Flyers,’ there are two and thirty names;
among them are found Alderman Barber (the friend of Swift, of
Bolingbroke and Pope), Richardson (the novelist), and Mist (the
Jacobite and something more!). The fourth list consists of three
names, ‘Roman Catholics.’ Negus was probably a malicious though
loyal busy-body. His list harmed neither Nonjuror nor High Flyer.
When, in 1729, Mr. Speaker Onslow was instrumental in procuring
for Bowyer the printing of the votes of the House of Commons, an
alarmed and loyal Whig asked Mr. Speaker if he was aware that he
was employing a Nonjuror. ‘I am quite sure of this,’ said Onslow, ‘I
am employing a truly honest man.’ There was no lack of them
among Nonjurors, and it is pleasant to find that even the High Flyers
came soon to be looked upon by reasonable Whigs as honourable
men. In 1732 Alderman Barber was elected by his fellow citizens
Lord Mayor of London; and he was the first printer who enjoyed that
dignity. This is the more remarkable, as poor Mrs. Manley, mistress
of the alderman’s house and of the alderman, had bitterly satirised
the Whig Ministry in her ‘New Atalantis.’ But the lady was now dead,
and the High-Flying Barber lost nothing by his old Jacobite opinions.
In the year 1724, the Nonjurors lost one who had
SACHEVEREL.
been their foremost man till he took the oath of
allegiance; namely Sacheverel. That act of homage to Brunswick
was never forgotten or forgiven by the Jacobites. When Sacheverel
died in the spring of 1724, Hearne could only acknowledge his
boldness and good presence. ‘He delivered a thing better than a
much more modest man, however preferable in learning, could do.’
Hearne sarcastically calls Sacheverel a ‘but,’ and says the best thing
this but ever printed was the speech at his trial, ‘which was none of
his own, but was penned by Dr. Francis Atterbury.’ Hearne’s hardest
hit at this recreant parson is to be found in the following words: ‘He
was but an indifferent scholar, but pretended to a great deal of
honesty, which I could never see in him, since he was the forwardest
to take the oaths, notwithstanding he would formerly be so forward in
speaking for, and drinking the health of, King James III.’
The once famous and audacious Nonjuror, the
HIS DEATH.
friend of Addison when both were young together, lost
caste with the Jacobites without gaining the esteem of the Whigs.
Mist’s High-Flying ‘Weekly Journal,’ of which Sacheverel was once
the Magnus Apollo, recorded his death and burial with no more
ceremony than if he had been an ordinary alderman of no particular
political colour. Perhaps this great reserve showed that sureties
binding Mist to keep the peace were not mere formalities. Not so
with Read and his Whig ‘Weekly.’ On Saturday, June 20, Sacheverel
received therein this charitable notice: ‘Yesterday night was buried,
at St. Andrew’s, Holborn, Dr. Henry Sacheverel, whose virtues are
too notorious to be enlarged upon. One of his most conspicuous
excellences for many years last past was that he got his living in the
high road to—which though through great Mercy he escaped here,
yet some people are so very censorious as to judge,—but this we
look upon to be barbarous and unchristian, and we say we hope the
best, and yet we heartily wish our Hopes were a little better
grounded. However, as there is a good old saying, De mortuis nil nisi
bonum, i.e. “If you speak of the dead, speak in their praise,” and not
being able, upon the strictest enquiry, to find the least commendable
circumstance relating to the Deceased, from his cradle to his coffin,
we choose rather to be silent than uncivil.’
The doctor seemed to recall his oath of allegiance, when he made
a bequest in his will of 500l. to Atterbury. It was an approval, as far
as the sum went, of the efforts of the ex-prelate to dethrone George
I., and to bring in a Popish sovereign, who was not at all reluctant to
promise especial favours to the Church of England! That Atterbury
was watching events in London is now known, from his
correspondence. In one of his letters from Paris to the Chevalier or
‘King,’ he refers with vexation to the conciliatory course the
Government in London was adopting towards the Jacobites: ‘They
are beginning,’ he says, ‘with Alderman Barber on this head, and
have actually offered him his pardon here for 3,000l., which it shall
not be my fault, if he accepts.’ The ex-Jacobite alderman ‘went over,’
in spite of the Jacobite ex-bishop.
The 30th of January sermons (1725) before the Lords, in the
Abbey, and the Commons, in St. Margaret’s, had now almost ceased
to be political. The former was preached by Waugh, Bishop of
Carlisle, from the Book of Chronicles; the latter, by the Rev. Dr.
Lupton, from 1 Samuel xii. 25, a text which had been much preached
on by expounders on both sides: ‘If ye shall still do wickedly, ye shall
be consumed, both ye and your king.’
Against the king in possession, the Jacobites now A NEW TOAST.
and then flung pointless darts. Mist’s Journal uttered
sarcasms against the Westminster mounted Train Bands,
complimenting the most of them for not tumbling out of their saddles.
The same semi-rebel paper recorded with satisfaction, as a sign of
the Duke of Wharton’s principles, that if the little stranger ‘expected
by the Duchess, proved to be a boy, his name should be James; if a
girl, Clementina;’ or, in other words, the child was to be called after
the King or Queen of England, de jure. Not long after, the bold and
roystering London Jacobites were rapturously drinking a health,
which was given by one guest in the form of ‘Henry,’ to which
another added, ‘Benedict,’ a third named ‘Maria,’ and a fourth raised
his glass to ‘Clement.’ In this form, they greeted the birth of the
second son of the Chevalier de St. George. Some ventured to
(prematurely) speak of him as Duke of York. The Whigs looked upon

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