Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: March 16, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Charles James Fox or search for Charles James Fox in all documents.

Your search returned 5 results in 1 document section:

e wrote "Sidney Biddulph," a novel, which could boast among its warm panegyrists Lord North and Mr. Fox, and "Nourjahad," an Eastern tale, with two plays, "The Dupe" and "The Discovery." The latter wght, he became acquainted, in the following year, with that able, unprincipled profligate, Charles James Fox. We learn that "Fox, after his first interview with him, affirmed that he had always thougFox, after his first interview with him, affirmed that he had always thought Hare and Charles Townsend the wittiest men he had ever met, but that Sheridan surpassed them both. " The meeting was at Brookes' Club-- a great drinking and gambling resort of the looser Whigs, eifor stakes of twenty or fifty guineas, but soon ran up to hundreds. What did it matter to Charles James Fox, to the Man of the People, whether he lost five, seven, or ten thousand of a night, when tyn in talk while the election proceeded, and did not let him go until Sheridan was voted in. Fox prompted Sheridan to go into Parliament, and he got in for the venal borough of Stafford, with Mr