[48] Sir Robert Peel’s Memorandum to the Duke of Wellington on the Position of the Cabinet, June 21. Memoirs of Sir Robert Peel, Vol. II., p. 288.
[49] Memoirs of Sir R. Peel, Vol. II., p. 246.
[50] Life of Lord Lyndhurst, by Sir Theodore Martin, K.C.B., p. 418.
[51] The Physiology of the Peel Party. Edinburgh: 1846. Privately printed.
[52] Lord Grey’s objections were not overcome, as a matter of fact, till Lord John Russell pledged himself to exercise vigilant personal control over Lord Palmerston’s Foreign Policy.
[53] Life of Lord Campbell, by the Hon. Mrs. Hardcastle, Vol. II., p. 201.
[54] See Mill’s Principles of Political Economy, Book V., Chap. XI., § 14.
[55] Memoirs, Vol. VIII.
[56] In the Edinburgh Review, Vol. LXXXV., there is an article on the seizure of Cracow, which, though not written by Prince Albert, one might almost say was dictated by him.
[57] C. C. Greville’s Journal of the Reign of Queen Victoria, Vol. II., p. 421.