Page images
PDF
EPUB
[blocks in formation]

Olchanoni, 341

Reynosa, 462

Rhine, river, 310

Riga, 397, 404, 474, 493, 559
Rio Vena, 687

Robouilneki, 341

Romanoff, 374

Romanzo, 406
Ronikontoni, 313

Manchester, 21, 210, 555, 596, | Oldenburgh (Duchy), 123, 148 | Rossien, 370

469, 676, 694, 754.

Magaradas, 687

Magdeburgh, 397

Majorca, 338, 369

Malaga, 248

Mala, Jaroslaff, 760

Maliatoni, 317

Malioardslavitz, 733, 765

Malta, 108, 196, 369

609

Old Sarum, 247

Manresa, 337

Olmedo, 247

Mansfield, 208

Olmos, 688

[blocks in formation]

Rossiena, 313, 316, 317
Roumchicki, 313

Russia, 116, 119, 141, 148,
203, 310

Rueda, 686, 693

Sabei, 381

Saint Cloud, 310

Saint Germains, 47
Saint Mawes, 47
Saint Laurient, 271

Saint Petersburgh, 153, 158,

189, 310, 377, 491, 573, 757, 766, 798, 817

Salamanca, 225, 237, 239, 240,

257, 289, 444, 706, 725, 752, 778

Paris, 14, 116, 119, 310, 538, Salta Naecka, 436

653, 666, 698

[merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small]

Samogitia, 314, 318, 349, 370, 373

San Dimas, 337

Sandwich, 356

San Olalla, 687
San Roman, 237
Santa Martha, 240
Santander, 686, 689
Sardinia, 369
Saxony, 125

Scotland, 179

Monasterio, 687, 727

Monserrat, 324

Podubno, 439

Pointe Claire, 269

Segorbe, 338, 339

Sogovia, 248

Montreal, 269, 271, 475, 718 | Pokhra, river, 758

Morley, 213

Morbihan, 808

Moscow, 324, 503, 504, 573,

636, 641, 657, 728, 802 Moskwa, river, 496, 500 Mouchnicki, 317 Moultram, 214

Mozier, 374

Poland, 174, 203, 265, 272

Polotsk, 373, 376, 400, 410,

526, 761, 766, 794

Pollos, 240, 446

[blocks in formation]

Ponevieji, 317

Poniewicz, 370

Porietche, 380

Port Malion, 261

Portugal, 108, 117, 203, 673, Slawkovo, 473

[blocks in formation]
[blocks in formation]

Prussia, 128, 119, 310
Pruszany, 440

Puente de Douro, 247, 693
Puerte de Guadarrama, 247
Pulawy, 310
Pultusk, 311

Quebec, 533

Queenborough, 2, 47
Queenstown, 720
Quintana Pallas, 688

Rawdon, 211, 216
Rawfold, 213

Slouboku, 372

Slousk, 372

Smolensk, 375, 579, 406, 409,

473, 506, 638, 661, 728, 757, 764, 819

Smoroghoni, 341

Sokolitschscha, 526

Soldars, 311

Soleinicki, 318

Sonderva, 315
Soto Pallacio, 687
Soubotnicki, 343, 372
Souria, 405

Southampton, 174, 449, 481,514
Southwark, S

Spain, 107, 117, 121, 140, 170,

203, 261, 673, 686, 706

[blocks in formation]

Sorts of Bullion. July Aug.

Portugal Gold
Coin
4 19 6 5 0 0 5 8
Standard Goldin
Bars.... 0 0 0 0 0

PRICE OF BULLION per Ounce, in the London Market, during the Six
Months ending 31st Dec. 1812, being the average price of euch
Month.-N.B. Where there is no price mentioned, there has been none
of that sort of Bullion in the Market.

Sept.
Oct. Nov. Dec.
£.s. d. £.s. d. £.s. d. £.s. d. £.s. d. £.s. d.

Number of BANKRUPTCIES as announced in the London Gazette; from 15th May to 15th November, 1812.

0 5 7 6 5 8 0 5 7 0 0 0 0 0 5 7 00

[blocks in formation]
[merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small]

00 0 0
0 0

[merged small][ocr errors][ocr errors][merged small]

6 640 6 6 0

6 606 6

[merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small]

in Bars... 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

[merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors]
[blocks in formation]

N. B. The MINT PRICE, per Ounce, of the Standard Gold and Silver
Bullion is as follows: Standard Gold in Bars, £.3 17s. 10d.
Silver in Bars; 5s. 2d. The other sorts of Bullion, except the Portugal
Standard
Gold Coin, are below Standard Value. The Prices in the above table is
the Market Price in Bank of England Notes.

[merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][ocr errors]

663

[merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small]

Number of CHRISTENINGS and BURIALS within the Bills of Mortality, from 23d June to 22d Dec. 1812.

[blocks in formation]
[ocr errors]

56'

To July 21..

[blocks in formation]
[ocr errors]
[ocr errors]

571

August 15.
Sept. 22.

1012

[blocks in formation]

686

[blocks in formation]

Oct. 7

950

[blocks in formation]

59

[blocks in formation]
[blocks in formation]
[ocr errors][ocr errors][merged small]
[merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small]

Average Prices of CORN, through all England and Wales, and of HAY, STRAW, and best FARNHAM HOPS, in London, from July to December, 1812, both Months inclusive.

[blocks in formation]
[merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small]

VOL. XXII. No. 1.] LONDON, SATURDAY, JULY 4, 1812.

1]

[Price 1s.

"That the Election of Members of Parliament ought to be free."- -BILL OF RIGHTS.

TO THE INDEPENDENT ELECTORS OF BRISTOL.

Gentlemen,

LETTER I.

Your City, the third in England in point of population, and, for the bravery and public-spirit of its inhabitants the first in the world, is now become, with all those who take an interest in the public welfare, an object of anxious attention. You, as the Electors of Westminster were, have long been the sport of the two artful factions, who have divided between them the profits arising from the obtaining of your votes. One of each faction has always been elected; and, as one of them always belonged to the faction out of place, you, whose intentions and views were honest, consoled yourselves with the reflection, that, if one of your members was in place, or belonged to the IN party, your other member, who belonged to the OUT party, was always in the House to watch him. But, now, I think, experience must have convinced you, that the OUT as well as the IN member was always seeking his own gain at your expense and that of the nation; and that the two factions, though openly hostile to each other, have always been perfectly well agreed as to the main point; namely, the perpetuating of those sinecure places and all those other means by which the public money is put into the pockets of individuals.

[2

sions of Mr. Hunt compared with those of Sir Samuel Romilly.

As to the first, you will bear in mind, Gentlemen, how often we, who wish for a reform of the parliament, have contended, that no member of the House of Commons ought to be a placeman or a pensioner. We have said, and we have shown, that in that Act of Parliament by virtue of which the present family was exalted to the throne of this kingdom; we have shown, that, by that Act, it was provided that no man having a pension or place of emolument under the Crown should be capa ble of being a member of the House of Com mons. It is, indeed, true, that this provi sion has since been repealed; but, it having been enacted, and that, too, on so important an occasion, shows clearly how jealous our ancestors were upon the subject.

-When we ask for a revival of this law, we are told that it cannot be wanted; because, if a man be a placeman or a pensioner before he be chosen at all, those who choose him know it, and if they like a placeman or a pensioner, who else has any thing to do with the matter? And, if a man be made a placeman or pensioner after he be chosen, he must vacale his seat, and return to his constituents to be re-elected before he can sit again; if they reject him he cannot sit, and, if they re-choose him, who else has any thing to do with the matter?

To be sure it is pretty impudent for these people to talk to us about choice and about re-choosing and about rejecting and the like, when they know that we are well informed of the nature of choosings and rechoosings at Old Sarum, at Gatton, at Queenborough, at Bodmin, at Penrynn, at Honiton, at Oakhampton, and at more than a hundred other places; it is pretty impudent to talk to us about members going back to their constituents at such

With this conviction in your minds, it is not to be wondered at that you are now beginning to make a stand for the remnant of your liberties; and, as I am firmly persuaded, that your success would be of infinite benefit to the cause of freedom in general, and, of course, to our country, now groaning under a compilation of calamities, I cannot longer withhold a public expres-places as those here mentioned; but, what sion of the sentiments which I entertain respecting the struggle in which you are engaged; and especially respecting the election now going on, the proceedings of a recent meeting in London, and the preten

will even the impudence of these people find to say in the case of those members, who, upon having grasped places or pensions, do go back to their constituents, and upon being rejected by them, go to some bo

A

« ՆախորդըՇարունակել »