Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: July 29, 1863., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Fox or search for Fox in all documents.

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time we ever saw it was in one of Barke's speeches in the House of Commons, on a bill to settle the Government of Canada. This was delivered about the year 1790. Fox, in commenting upon the bill, had said that the Canadians were entitled to more liberty, in the article of self-government, than it gave them. That they were in fare and more unworthy to be entrusted with that power. He then launched into a tirade against the French revolution, which was then in full progress, and denounced Fox and his friends for their opinions on that subject. It was on this occasion that he and Fox came to an open rupture, and the speech is memorable on that account, aFox came to an open rupture, and the speech is memorable on that account, as well as for its extreme vehemence and acrimony. It is many years since we read it, and we do not know that we have stated the circumstances connected with it with accuracy. But it was somewhat in that way. We are confident, however, that he called the English, and their descendants, "Anglo-Saxons," and that we first saw the ter