Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- General Editors’ Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Chronology
- List of Abbreviations
- Note
- Introduction
- The Conduct of the Allies
- Some Advice Humbly Offer’d to the Members of the October Club
- Some Remarks on the Barrier Treaty
- The New Way of Selling Places at Court
- Some Reasons to Prove . . . In a Letter to a Whig-Lord
- It’s Out at Last: Or, French Correspondence Clear as the Sun
- A Dialogue Upon Dunkirk, Between a Whig and a Tory
- A Hue and Cry After Dismal
- A Letter From the Pretender, to a Whig-Lord
- A Defence of Erasmus Lewis, or The Examiner (2 February 1713)
- Vote of Thanks by the House of Lords (9 April 1713) and The Humble Address of the . . . Lords (11 April 1713)
- The Importance of the Guardian Considered
- The Publick Spirit of the Whigs
- A Discourse Concerning the Fears From the Pretender
- Some Free Thoughts Upon the Present State of Affairs
- Some Considerations Upon the Consequences Hoped and Feared from the Death of the Queen
- Contributions to the Post Boy and the Evening Post
- Textual Introduction and Accounts of Individual Works
- Textual Introduction Ian Gadd
- The Conduct of the Allies: Textual Account
- Appendix: Transcripts of the British Library Manuscripts of the Vote of Thanks and The Humble Address of . . . the Lords
- Bibliography
- Index
Contributions to the Post Boy and the Evening Post
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 September 2021
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- General Editors’ Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Chronology
- List of Abbreviations
- Note
- Introduction
- The Conduct of the Allies
- Some Advice Humbly Offer’d to the Members of the October Club
- Some Remarks on the Barrier Treaty
- The New Way of Selling Places at Court
- Some Reasons to Prove . . . In a Letter to a Whig-Lord
- It’s Out at Last: Or, French Correspondence Clear as the Sun
- A Dialogue Upon Dunkirk, Between a Whig and a Tory
- A Hue and Cry After Dismal
- A Letter From the Pretender, to a Whig-Lord
- A Defence of Erasmus Lewis, or The Examiner (2 February 1713)
- Vote of Thanks by the House of Lords (9 April 1713) and The Humble Address of the . . . Lords (11 April 1713)
- The Importance of the Guardian Considered
- The Publick Spirit of the Whigs
- A Discourse Concerning the Fears From the Pretender
- Some Free Thoughts Upon the Present State of Affairs
- Some Considerations Upon the Consequences Hoped and Feared from the Death of the Queen
- Contributions to the Post Boy and the Evening Post
- Textual Introduction and Accounts of Individual Works
- Textual Introduction Ian Gadd
- The Conduct of the Allies: Textual Account
- Appendix: Transcripts of the British Library Manuscripts of the Vote of Thanks and The Humble Address of . . . the Lords
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Post Boy 25–27 December 1711
London, Dec. 27. On Saturday the 22d instant, about Four in the Morning, Mrs. Anne Long, Sister of Sir James Long, Bart. died at Linn in Norfolk, after a Sickness but of Four Hours. She was a Lady very much celebrated here for her Beauty, Virtue, and good Sense; and is extremely lamented by all who knew her.
Evening Post 11–13 Nov 1712
London, Nov. 13. We have received a more particular Account relating to the Box sent to the Lord Treasurer, as mention’d in our last, which is as follows.
On the Third Instant a tall, slender Boy, having on a Gray Coat and a brown bob Peruke, delivered a Band-box, (directed to the Lord Treasurers Porter) at a Penny-Post House behind Ludgate, which the next Morning was carried to the Office in Chichesters Rents, Chancery Lane, and from thence to the Lord Treasurers by one Causon, a Penny Postman, in which, upon opening was found another Band-Box, directed to theLordTreasurer. The Box was carry’d up to my Lord's Bed-Chamber, and deliver’d to his Lordship, who lifting up the Lid as far as the Pack-thread that ty’d it would give way, said, He saw a Pistol; whereupon, a Gentleman in the Room desired the Box might be given to him; he took it to theWindow, at some Distance from my Lord, and open’d it, by cutting with a Pen-knife the Pack-threads that fasten’d the Lid. The first Thing that appear’d was the Stock and Lock of a Pocket-Pistol, lying across the middle of the Band- Box, and fasten’d at each end with two Nails; on each side of the Fire-lock were laid the Middle-pieces of two large Ink-horns charg’d with Powder and Ball, and Touch-holes bored at the Butt-ends of ‘em, to which were fasten’d two Linnen Bags of Gunpowder, and at the other end of the Bags were two Quils fill’d withWildfire. These two artificial Barrels were plac’d with the Muzzels contrary-ways, and theQuil of one of ‘em directed to the Pan of the Pistol, as the other probably was, tho’ disorder’d by the Carriage.
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- English Political Writings 1711–1714'The Conduct of the Allies' and Other Works, pp. 319 - 324Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2008