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The Seat of the Right Honourable Sir Robert Walpole, Earl of Orford
Occasioned by His Late Promotion to the Offices of First Lord of the Treasury and Chancellor of the Exchequer. Wherein is Contained, a Short View of the Characters of the Present Ministry, and of the Wisdom and Justice of Their Proceedings at this Juncture. As Also, a State of the Scandalous and Treasonable Practices of the Tory-faction, in Parliament, and Elsewhere; Since His Majesty's Happy Accession to the Throne. Together with Characters of Their Leaders and Chief Managers; from the Late D. of O- Down to Mr. H- By a Member of the House of Commons
In Several Letters to Caleb D'Anvers, Esq. : Dedicated to the Rt. Hon. Sir Robert Walpole
To the Right Honourable Sir Robert Walpole..
Occasion'd by a Late Pamphlet, Intitled, An Enquiry Into the Conduct of Our Domestick Affairs, from the Year 1721, to Christmas 1733
A reply to William Pulteney's "Enquiry into the conduct of our domestick affairs."...
And Therefore Fit to be Perus'd by All the Electors
both loyal subjects of the same most gracious Sovereign, and co-members of the same free, civil, Christian community
And a Letter to the Whig Examiner
The Publick Revenues, and the Annual Supplies, Granted by Parliament. Occasion'd by ... An Enquiry Into the Conduct of Our Domestick Affairs, ...
Or, a Description of the Collection of Pictures at Houghton Hall in Norfolk, the Seat of the Right Honourable Sir Robert Walpole, Earl of Orford
The First, to the Right Honourable Sir Robert Walpole, in December 1727 ... with His Answer. ; The Second, to the Lord Chancellor King on His Lordship's Character, as it Stood in January 1727-8. ; The Third, to His Lordship, on the Author's Design of Taking Orders, in September 1728 ...
In a Letter from a Tory Member of Parliament to His Friend in the Country
Expelled Him [sic] the House of Commons, and Approved of the Infamous Peace of Utrecht. Written by Sir Robert Walpole, Afterwards Earl of Orford.
Concerning the Duties on Wine and Tobaccao
Or, The Queen's Honour, the Nation's Safety, the Liberties of Europe, and the Peace of the World, All at Stake Till that Fort and Port be Totally Demolish'd by the French
With Other Poems and Translations from the Greek, Italian, E &. E &. ...