Cobbett's Political Register, Volumer 69-70William Cobbett William Cobbett, 1830 |
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Side 7
... nation has before it the works of ing it utterly impossible , that a man so your hands . It has before it , behind it , famed should doom himself to eternal and in the very heart of it , the proof of disgrace ; should make his name a by ...
... nation has before it the works of ing it utterly impossible , that a man so your hands . It has before it , behind it , famed should doom himself to eternal and in the very heart of it , the proof of disgrace ; should make his name a by ...
Side 11
... nation has before it the works of your hands . It has before it , behind it , and in the very heart of it , the proof of what can be done by an unreformed Parliament ; by a system of election such as that which has existed for so many ...
... nation has before it the works of your hands . It has before it , behind it , and in the very heart of it , the proof of what can be done by an unreformed Parliament ; by a system of election such as that which has existed for so many ...
Side 15
... nation has before it the works of your hands . It has before it , behind it , and in the very heart of it , the proof of what can be done by an unreformed Parliament ; by a system of election such as that which has existed for so many ...
... nation has before it the works of your hands . It has before it , behind it , and in the very heart of it , the proof of what can be done by an unreformed Parliament ; by a system of election such as that which has existed for so many ...
Side 17
... nation has before it the works of your hands . It has before it , behind it , and in the very heart of it , the proof of what can be done by an unreformed Parliament ; by a system of election such as that which has existed for so many ...
... nation has before it the works of your hands . It has before it , behind it , and in the very heart of it , the proof of what can be done by an unreformed Parliament ; by a system of election such as that which has existed for so many ...
Side 83
... nation thinks of us and our Go- be stricken with political incapacity , vernment . The world is not to be de- and ... nations , know that we are but the members of the aristocracy will impotent as long as these loads lie upon take back ...
... nation thinks of us and our Go- be stricken with political incapacity , vernment . The world is not to be de- and ... nations , know that we are but the members of the aristocracy will impotent as long as these loads lie upon take back ...
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amongst assignats Bank beer bill boroughmongers Brougham Burdett called cause church classes corn coun Cuba currency debt distress Duke Duke of Wellington duty England English fact farmers Fleet Street France French friends gentleman give gold Government hear heard honourable House hope House of Commons hundred interest Ireland JETHRO TULL King labour land Lectures letter Lincolnshire London look Lord Majesty malt manner matter means measure meeting ment Mexico millions Ministers nation never noble opinion paper paper-money parish Parliament passed pensions persons petition petitioners POLIGNAC poor pounds pounds sterling present produce published reform Register reign relief repeal ruin sell shillings SIR JAMES GRAHAM slaves sort Spain speech suffer sure taxes thing thousand tion town vote Whigs whole William Cobbett WILMOT HORTON wish
Populære avsnitt
Side 641 - Yes, I am proud; I must be proud to see Men not afraid of God afraid of me: Safe from the Bar, the Pulpit, and the Throne, Yet touched and shamed by ridicule alone.
Side 501 - Enter them, and look at the bits of chairs or stools; the wretched boards tacked together, to serve for a table; the floor of pebble, broken brick, or of the bare ground ; look at the thing called a bed ; and survey the rags on the backs of the wretched inhabitants...
Side 597 - ... even the cottagers, deprived of the commons on which they formerly fed their cattle, were reduced to misery : and a decay of people, as well as a diminution of the former plenty, was remarked in the kingdom...
Side 177 - I have directed the estimates of the current year to be laid before you. They have been framed with every attention to economy which the circumstances of the country will permit...
Side 101 - Judicial forms do not easily lend themselves to an effectual repression. This truth has long since struck reflecting minds ; it has lately become still more evident. To satisfy the wants which caused its institution, the repression ought to be prompt and strong; it has been slow, weak, and almost null. When it interferes, the mischief is already done, and the punishment, far from repairing it, only adds the scandal of the discussion.