"The unhappy party divisions must ever give an honest man a most unfavourable opinion of these times, when the honour and dignity, the safety and tranquility, of the nation, were continually neglected for the little interested views of party; but however this Convention with all its blemishes saved the nation from the iron rod of arbitrary power. Let that palliate all defects, and though the constitution was not so well established as it might have been at this time, though sufficient care was not taken to keep the advantages of our insular situation, nor effectual bars put to Continental influence, let us still remember we stand in debt for our liberty and religion to the success of 1688."
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Original Language: English
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George III, essay written when he was Prince of Wales (late 1750s), quoted in John Brooke, King George III (1972; 1974), pp. 110-111
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Glorious_Revolution
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Glorious Revolution
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