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his faculties and experience, he is still qualified to merit new gratitude and honours from his country. He still cherishes and acts upon the same principles which he espoused in early life; principles which approve the union of constitutional liberty with an executive authority in the hands of the Sovereign, adequate to every fit purpose of internal order and exterior defence.

In private life, his manners and conduct are amiable, elegant, and correct. He delights in polite literature, and in that history and philosophy which have the most immediate and useful relations to the elucidation of national affairs. He is attentive to rural improvements on his estates; and is skilled in the branches and principles of English gardening. He has ever lived in agreeable intercourse with his neighbours in the country, and has been accustomed to notice clergymen of merit living near him, with many kind and flattering attentions,

THE END.

T. Gillet, Printer, Salisbury-Square,

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