William Cobbett


 

William Cobbett (March 9, 1763June 18, 1835) was a radical agriculturist and prolific journalist. He was born at Farnham, Surrey. He thought that the reform of Parliament and the abolition of the rotten boroughs would help cure the poverty of the farm labourers. Cobbett constantly attacked the borough-mongers, sinecurists and tax-eaters. He opposed the Corn Laws, a tax on imported grain. Through the many apparent inconsistencies in Cobbett's life, one strand continued to run: an ingrained opposition to authority and a suspicion of novelty. Early in his career, he was a "loyalist" supporter of King and Country; later, he joined (and arguably helped inspire) the burgeoning radical movement. One particularly "seditious" rhyme attributed to Cobbett was:

Related Topics:
March 9 - 1763 - June 18 - 1835 - Agriculturist - Journalist - Farnham - Surrey - Parliament - Rotten borough - Corn Laws

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:George the Third,

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:Ought never to have occurred;

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:Such an absurd accident,

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:Is entirely without precedent.

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~ Table of Content ~

Introduction
Early life (1783-1791)
France and the United States (1792-1800)
Return to England
Prison (1810-1812)
United States (1817-1819)
England (1819-1835)
Standing for Parliament
External links
Publications
References

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