The Edinburgh Annual Register, for 1808-26, Volum 2J. Ballantyne and Company, 1811 |
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Side 4
... night . " At these words he walked out of the house . Lord Sidmouth's speech was in a lower tone , but in that spirit of can dour which has obtained for him the good opinion and the confidence of the people , beyond all other public men ...
... night . " At these words he walked out of the house . Lord Sidmouth's speech was in a lower tone , but in that spirit of can dour which has obtained for him the good opinion and the confidence of the people , beyond all other public men ...
Side 15
... night announced to his Parliament , that he has formally disapproved of it . His feelings have been in uni- on with the feelings of the nation . The public displeasure was loud and general , -every patriotic heart felt the stain cast ...
... night announced to his Parliament , that he has formally disapproved of it . His feelings have been in uni- on with the feelings of the nation . The public displeasure was loud and general , -every patriotic heart felt the stain cast ...
Side 18
... night , it was not improbable that intelligence might arrive of still greater calamities . The country was now coming to that state , whether by the mismanagement of ministers , or by the force of events , that party considerations must ...
... night , it was not improbable that intelligence might arrive of still greater calamities . The country was now coming to that state , whether by the mismanagement of ministers , or by the force of events , that party considerations must ...
Side 39
... night will be to give some important instruction to the country , and that those who have been attributing the failure of our expedition to other causes will come to a distinct vote ; that they will inform the country , if they are of ...
... night will be to give some important instruction to the country , and that those who have been attributing the failure of our expedition to other causes will come to a distinct vote ; that they will inform the country , if they are of ...
Side 49
... night and puffs in the morning , to confound the sense of the country , and , as sometimes happens in other theatres , to force , as excellent , down the throats of the public , what they knew in their own minds to be most execrable ...
... night and puffs in the morning , to confound the sense of the country , and , as sometimes happens in other theatres , to force , as excellent , down the throats of the public , what they knew in their own minds to be most execrable ...
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appointed arms artillery attack Austrian batteries battle British army brought Buonaparte Cadiz called Captain cause cavalry charge Clarke Colonel Wardle command conduct consequence considered convention of Cintra corps corruption coun Cuesta declared defended Duke of York duty effect emperor enemy England English evil favour feeling fire force formed France French Frere Galicia garrison honourable hope horse House inquiry junta king land letter Lord Lord Castlereagh Lord Cochrane Madrid means measure ment military ministers nation neral never night object officers opinion Parliament party patriots Perceval persons port Portugal Portugueze possession present prince prisoners proceeded replied retreat royal highness sent ships sion Sir Arthur Sir Arthur Wellesley Sir Francis Burdett Sir John Moore soldiers Soult Spain Spaniards Spanish tain taken ther thing thought tion town troops vernment Whitbread whole wish wounded Zaragoza
Populære avsnitt
Side 332 - The tax which each individual is bound to pay ought to be certain, and not arbitrary. The time of payment, the manner of payment, the quantity to be paid, ought all to be clear and plain to the contributor, and to every other person.
Side 85 - Up to our native seat : descent and fall To us is adverse. Who but felt of late, When the fierce foe hung on our broken rear Insulting, and pursued us through the deep, With what compulsion and laborious flight We sunk thus low ? The...
Side 417 - But I have it in express charge from the President to state that while he forbears to insist on the further punishment of the offending officer, he is not the less sensible of the justice and utility of such an example, nor the less persuaded that it would best comport with what is due from his Britannic Majesty to his own honor.
Side 223 - Nemesis visiting the sins of the fathers upon the children to the third and fourth generation...
Side 151 - Master French must mind what he is about, or I shall cut up him and his levy too.
Side 416 - Upon receiving through you, on the part of the American Government, a distinct and official Recognition of the three above-mentioned Conditions, His Majesty will lose no time in sending to America a Minister fully empowered to consign them to a formal and regular Treaty.
Side 3 - Portugal, and the deliverance of the kingdom of his ally from the presence and oppressions of the French army, his Majesty most deeply regretted the termination of that campaign by an armistice and convention, of some of the articles of which his Majesty has felt himself obliged formally to declare his disapprobation...
Side 269 - ... generate a kind of expansive force, that will burst asunder even the best compacted governments. The abuses, too, serve to give a direction to the discontent and angry feeling produced in the first instance by the taxes. They stand in the place of the abstract rights of a few years ago, and are the last improvement made in the machine for overturning states, from which it is conceived to derive a much greater heft and purchase, than in its old form of
Side 173 - I do, in the most solemn manner, upon my honour as a prince, distinctly assert my innocence, not only by denying all corrupt participation in any of the infamous transactions which have appeared in evidence at the bar of the house of commons, or any connivance at their existence, but also the slightest knowledge or suspicion that they existed at all.
Side 793 - I am confident, in no respect contribute to this object, nor could it I think be considered in any other light than as a dereliction of public principle. This answer which I must have given to any such proposal, if made while...