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  1. 344 CHARLES JAMES FOX AND THE PEOPLE to its ruin, he possesses that scorn of Power, ill-gotten and ill-employed, that philosophic dignity of mind, that grandeur of consistency, which his inferior Rival never could attain. Wyvill claimed that the suspicion with which the radicals tended to regard

  2. Abstract. The feverish politics of 1782–4 ended, for Fox, in public and sensational defeat. Their impact and influence cast long shadows, and for Fox they were a formative experience. Defeat reinforced in Fox all those inclinations to abandon politics that had always been part of his personality.

  3. Charles James Fox (24 de janeiro de 1749 - 13 de setembro de 1806), chamado de The Honourable de 1762, foi um político e estadista Whig britânico cuja carreira parlamentar durou 38 anos do final do século 18 e início do século 19.

  4. FOX, Hon. Charles James (1749-1806), of St. Anne's Hill, Chertsey, Surr. Published in The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1790-1820 , ed. R. Thorne, 1986 Available from Boydell and Brewer

  5. Charles James Fox (1749-1806) was a Whig statesman, orator and friend of George, Prince of Wales. His parliamentary career spanned 38 years; he was Britain’s first Foreign Secretary, and a prominent opponent of George III and William Pitt the Younger. He spent almost all his political career in opposition, campaigned for the abolition of slavery, supported the French Revolution, and ...

  6. 4 de ago. de 2020 · Charles James Fox (1749-1806) spent almost the entirety of his four decades in British politics as an aggressive but frequently excluded and sometimes marginalized critic of the reigning government. His one fleeting moment of influence lasted less than a year before its undoing in deeply bitter collision with the crown.

  7. 4 de jun. de 1992 · Abstract. Fox resumed political life in 1801, but on terms. His interest in politics was at best part-time. Between 1801 and 1806, only twenty-two performances are recorded in the collected edition of his speeches. Letters to friends continue to address themselves to literary and agricultural topics as well as the continuing iniquities of Pitt.