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18 of imposing on them the duty of so much painful attendance. At no period, from the commencement of his attack, had His Majesty been insensible to his critical state; but when he alluded to the subject, it was evident that any anxiety which he felt arose less from present apprehension than from solicitude for the Country, and from a contemplation of the embarrassment into which it might be thrown by his early dissolution. It was to such reflections as these that His Majesty gave expression on the Morning of the 16th. when he observed to the Queen "I have had some quiet sleep; come and pray with me, and thank the Almighty for it." Her Majesty