[ [!-- Note Anchor 65 --][Footnote 65: 233 to 315.]
[ [!-- Note Anchor 66 --][Footnote 66: It is perhaps worth pointing out, as a specimen of the practical manner in which parliamentary business was transacted at that time, that this great debate—in which (the House being in committee) Mr. Dunning himself spoke three times, and Lord North, Mr. T. Pitt, Mr. Fox, the Speaker (Sir F. Norton), the Attorney-general, General Conway, Governor Pownall, the Lord-advocate, and several other members took part—was concluded by twelve o'clock.]
[ [!-- Note Anchor 67 --][Footnote 67: February 8, 1780, on Lord Shelburne's motion for an inquiry into the public expenditure.—Parliamentary History, xx., 1346.]
[ [!-- Note Anchor 68 --][Footnote 68: 101 to 55.]
[ [!-- Note Anchor 69 --][Footnote 69: "Constitutional History," iii., 43.]
[ [!-- Note Anchor 70 --][Footnote 70: His language is said to have been that "there was at all events one Magistrate in the kingdom who would do his duty."—Lord Stanhope, History of England, vii., 48.]
[ [!-- Note Anchor 71 --][Footnote 71: "Lives of the Lord Chancellors," c. clxvii.]
[ [!-- Note Anchor 72 --][Footnote 72: Lord Stanhope's "History of England," vii, 56.]