Hansard's Parliamentary DebatesT.C. Hansard, 1881 |
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Side 61
... Irish institu- tions and conditions . Hitherto , English legislation for Ireland had neglected all consideration of Irish ideas ; the result had been uniform failure and disap- pointment . He hailed with pleasure this new departure and ...
... Irish institu- tions and conditions . Hitherto , English legislation for Ireland had neglected all consideration of Irish ideas ; the result had been uniform failure and disap- pointment . He hailed with pleasure this new departure and ...
Side 85
... Irish industry , might it remove the well - founded grievances of the Irish tenantry , might it atone in some degree for our past misgovernment of Ireland , and help to make her a source of strength instead of weakness to the Empire ...
... Irish industry , might it remove the well - founded grievances of the Irish tenantry , might it atone in some degree for our past misgovernment of Ireland , and help to make her a source of strength instead of weakness to the Empire ...
Side 195
... Irish peasants than pute with France about Otaheite . The was possessed by any other man in the Government were afraid if they went to House . There was no Member there , war with either or both of these Powers not even the Irish ...
... Irish peasants than pute with France about Otaheite . The was possessed by any other man in the Government were afraid if they went to House . There was no Member there , war with either or both of these Powers not even the Irish ...
Side 197
... Irish people so much distrust . The minds of some statesmen were said to be like the pupils of the human eye - they con- tracted themselves the more the greater the light that was shed in upon them . With all the experience of the past ...
... Irish people so much distrust . The minds of some statesmen were said to be like the pupils of the human eye - they con- tracted themselves the more the greater the light that was shed in upon them . With all the experience of the past ...
Side 199
... Irish griev ance . The line taken that evening by the Government was altogether incon- sistent with their arguments when the Coercion Bill was passing through the House . The Government had said that they could not give the House ...
... Irish griev ance . The line taken that evening by the Government was altogether incon- sistent with their arguments when the Coercion Bill was passing through the House . The Government had said that they could not give the House ...
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Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
A. M. SULLIVAN adjournment agricultural Amendment arrest asked attention Attorney battalions believe Bill Bradlaugh charge Chief Secretary clause Committee consider course Court debate DILKE discussion Dublin duty Earl England estates eviction fact fair rent favour fees Foreign Friend the Member give given GLADSTONE hoped House interest Ireland Irish Land Law Ireland Land League landlord learned Gentleman Lord Beaconsfield LORD RANDOLPH CHURCHILL Majesty's Government MARQUESS OF HARTINGTON matter measure ment Morning Sitting Motion night noble Friend noble Lord object Office opinion Parliament passed persons present Prime Minister principle proposed Provisional Orders question reason reference regard reply Report Resolution school board Scotland second reading SIR WILFRID LAWSON SPEAKER speech statement T. P. O'CONNOR taken tenant right thing thought tion Trade Transvaal Tunis vernment vote W. E. FORSTER wished words
Populære avsnitt
Side 295 - The question with me is, not whether you have a right to render your people miserable ; but whether it is / not your interest to make them happy. It is not, what a lawyer tells me I may do ; but what humanity, reason, and justice, tell me I ought to do.
Side 1061 - The case in which it may sometimes be a matter of deliberation, how far, or in what manner it is proper to restore the free importation of foreign goods, after it has been for some time interrupted, is, when particular manufactures, by means of high duties or prohibitions upon all foreign goods which can come into competition with them, have been so far extended as to employ...
Side 569 - ... value that has been given to his holding by the expenditure of his own capital and labour, the desire for legislative interference to protect him from an arbitrary increase of rent does not seem unnatural, and we are inclined to think that by the majority of landowners legislation properly framed to accomplish this end would not be objected to.
Side 1061 - A country cannot be expected to renounce the power of taxing foreigners, unless foreigners will in return practise towards itself the same forbearance. The only mode in which a country can save itself from being a loser by the revenue duties imposed by other countries on its commodities, is to impose corresponding revenue duties on theirs.
Side 55 - A fair rent means such a rent as in the opinion of the " court after hearing the parties, and considering all the " circumstances of the case, holding, and district, a solvent " tenant would undertake to pay one year with another.
Side 367 - Bill for confirming certain Provisional Orders^, made by the Board of Trade under the Tramways Act, 1870...
Side 343 - Act to confirm certain Provisional Orders made by the Board of Trade under the General Pier and Harbour Act 1801 relating to Anstruther Deal Hunstanton and St.
Side 633 - Speech delivered in the House of Lords, on Tuesday, April 21, 1874, on Moving for a Select Committee to Inquire into the Laws relating to Patronage, Simony, and Exchange of Benefices in the Church of England.
Side 73 - To the complaint that the Bill gives so much to the tenants and takes it all from the landlords, I should make this answer : if at this moment all that has been done by the tenant in Ireland were gone, imagine that ! — if all that the tenants have done were gone, and all that the owners have done...