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8561.

PREFATORY NOTE.

THE Second Part of this work is twice as long as the First Part, although it runs over only four years and a few months, or about one-third of the time surveyed in the First Part. This want of proportion, although excessive, is in a great measure justified by the excessive value of the work done for the British Commonwealth in the years now surveyed. These years, 1830-35, are full of the virtue and wisdom which make Modern England supremely worthy of a student's contemplation; it seems not too much to say that they form a period of paramount importance in the universal history of legislation and government. The book does not profess to be a history in the ordinary sense. In the selection of topics there may be detected some fantasy or partiality; but it should in fairness be observed that, as some topics neglected in Part I. are considered more synoptically in Part II., so there are now some other topics, such as the Bank Charter, set aside for treatment in Part III. or IV.

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XXXVI. DEBATES IN THE HOUSE OF LORDS ON THE IMPROVED
REFORM BILL IN THE SPRING OF 1832

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the Commons.

Submission of the Tories.

The House of Lords managed by the King.
Scottish and Irish Reform Bills.

XXXVIII. THE INABILITY OF ENGLAND AND FRANCE TO RE-
STORE THE STATE OF POLAND

XXXIX. THE JOINT ACTION OF ENGLAND AND FRANCE IN
SPAIN AND IN PORTUGAL

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Palmerston's new Balance of Power.

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XL. THE BEHAVIOUR OF THE REFORMED HOUSE OF COM-
MONS IN ITS FIRST SESSION, 1833.

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XLI. THE ENDEAVOURS OF THE GREY-STANLEY WHIGS TO
RULE IRELAND, 1833

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XLV. REFORM OF TOWN GOVERNMENT IN SCOTLAND, 1833 357

XLVI. ROYAL COMMISSIONS PREPARING FOR LEGISLATION 364

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