[89] Delany, v. 403-5.
[90] Lady Suffolk's Letters, ii. 234.
[91] Porritt's Unreformed House of Commons, i. 35. T. Mozley when the nineteenth century was well advanced saw the constituency of Old Sarum in the person of 'a bright looking old fellow with a full rubicund face and a profusion of white hair.' Reminiscences, ii. 13.
[92] Grenville Papers, i. 423.
[93] Grenville Papers, i. 423-5.
[94] Grenville Papers, ii. 496.
[95] Ib. ii. 512.
[96] Lord Dundonald in his 'Autobiography' says that it produced 20,693l. p.a.
[97] Dickins and Stanton. 'An Eighteenth Century Correspondence,' 193.
[98] It seems best to call this worthy, who assumed the name of Dodington, by his patronymic; for it is his own name, and the most appropriate.