| Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| English Books | Anna Centenary Library | 941.070207 HUM (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 231523 |
| 941.07 SMY The making of the United Kingdom, 1660-1800 : state, religion and identity in Britain and Ireland | 941.07 WIL The sense of the people : politics, culture, and imperialism in England, 1715-1785 | 941.070092 CHE Lord Chesterfield's letters | 941.070207 HUM Sister Peg | 941.07092 FOR The Duchess | 941.07092 HOL Wellington : the iron Duke | 941.07092 MOO Wedlock : the true story of the disastrous marriage and remarkable divorce of Mary Eleanor Bowes, Countess of Strathmore |
Scholars have known for some years that in 1760 Hume write a humorous satire against William Pitt the Elder. Mr Raynor argues that this hitherto unlocated work is Sister Peg, an anonymous publication which has been traditionally ascribed to Adam Ferguson. This witty and occasionally malicious Scriblerian piece was composed as a sequel to Dr John Arbuthnot's famous History of John Bull (1712). Hume's satirical allegory recounts the relations between England (John Bull of Bull-hall) and Scotland (Sister Peg of Thistledown) from earliest times until April 1760 when a bill to extend the militia to Scotland was defeated in parliament due to the opposition of the Duke of Newcastle, Hardwicke, and King George II. The first part of the satire places this debate in historical perspective. The final chapters are an imaginary reconstruction of the militia debate in parliament. Apart from the satire's intrinsic interest and biographical significance, it is an important document for the interpretation of Hume's political theory.
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