`an important and richly suggestive book which extends our understanding not merely of the unreformed electoral system, but of the political culture of Hanoverian England more generally ... his most impressive insights are into the electoral sociology of Hanoverian England. By demonstrating the extent to which electoral processes were participatory and popular, he has contributed substantially to our understanding of the nature of political stability ... his work will deservedly hold the field for the foreseeable future. It is a book to savour.'EHR April 1993