The New annual register, or General repository of history, politics, and literature, Volum 331813 |
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Side 20
... appeared to me to be of no very delicate description , and therefore I do now ask of that right honourable gentleman if he did intend any such allusion ? ” Mr. Perceval " I could have meant none . The lines are Pope's -the metaphor is ...
... appeared to me to be of no very delicate description , and therefore I do now ask of that right honourable gentleman if he did intend any such allusion ? ” Mr. Perceval " I could have meant none . The lines are Pope's -the metaphor is ...
Side 35
... appeared to him a matter of more com- plexity than any thing which he had ever before heard submitted to parliament , notwithstanding that the subject appeared to be one of almost the greatest possible simpli . city . The right ...
... appeared to him a matter of more com- plexity than any thing which he had ever before heard submitted to parliament , notwithstanding that the subject appeared to be one of almost the greatest possible simpli . city . The right ...
Side 42
... appeared to think that there was any exorbitancy in this estimate.- The whole amount of the excess thus created above the former ex- prince were to surrender the whole penditure was 70,000l .: but if the of his income , the expenditure ...
... appeared to think that there was any exorbitancy in this estimate.- The whole amount of the excess thus created above the former ex- prince were to surrender the whole penditure was 70,000l .: but if the of his income , the expenditure ...
Side 43
... appeared to him . to be necessary , before he could consent to give his vote for the se- cond reading of the bill . It was impossible to understand , from the papers which had been already pro- duced , what arrangement it was necessary ...
... appeared to him . to be necessary , before he could consent to give his vote for the se- cond reading of the bill . It was impossible to understand , from the papers which had been already pro- duced , what arrangement it was necessary ...
Side 46
... appeared from it that his majesty's civil list consisted in all of 960,000 .; that out of this amount of the civil list 60,000 % . was paid to the prince of Wales ; that there then remained 900,000l . to the civil list , from which it ...
... appeared from it that his majesty's civil list consisted in all of 960,000 .; that out of this amount of the civil list 60,000 % . was paid to the prince of Wales ; that there then remained 900,000l . to the civil list , from which it ...
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The New annual register, or General repository of history ..., Volum 30 Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1810 |
The New annual register, or General repository of history ..., Volum 32 Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1812 |
The New annual register, or General repository of history ..., Volum 12 Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1792 |
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Populære avsnitt
Side 241 - And whereas the Senate of the United States have approved of the said arrangement and recommended that it should be carried into effect, the same having also received the sanction of 'His Royal Highness, the Prince Regent, acting in the name and on the behalf of His...
Side 191 - We behold, in fine, on the side of Great Britain, a state of war against the United States; and on the side of the United- States, a state of peace towards Great Britain.
Side xiv - Dictionary was written with little assistance of the learned, and without any patronage of the great; not in the soft obscurities of retirement, or under the shelter of academic bowers, but amidst inconvenience and distraction, in sickness and in sorrow.
Side xii - As a writer he is entitled to one praise of the highest kind: his mode of thinking, and of expressing his thoughts, is original. His blank verse is no more the blank verse of Milton, or of any other poet, than the rhymes of Prior are the rhymes of Cowley. His numbers, his pauses, his diction, are of his own growth, without transcription, without imitation.
Side 188 - In aggravation of these predatory measures, they have been considered as in force from the dates of their notification; a retrospective effect being thus added, as has been done in other important cases, to the unlawfulness of the course pursued. And to render the outrage the more signal, these mock blockades have been reiterated and enforced in the face of official communications from the British government, declaring, as the true definition of a legal blockade, ''that particular ports must be actually...
Side 187 - Against this crying enormity, which Great Britain would be so prompt to avenge if committed against herself, the United States have in vain exhausted remonstrances and expostulations...
Side 191 - ... by prize courts, no longer the organs of public law, but the instruments of arbitrary edicts; and their unfortunate crews dispersed and lost, or forced or inveigled in British ports into British fleets; whilst arguments are employed, in support of these aggressions, which have no foundation but in a principle, equally supporting a claim to regulate our external commerce, in all cases whatsoever. We behold, in fine...
Side 347 - Government now demands as prerequisites to a repeal of its orders as they relate to the United States that a formality should be observed in the repeal of the French decrees nowise necessary to their termination nor exemplified by British usage, and that the French...
Side 190 - ... belligerents, was made known to the British Government. As that Government admits that an actual application of an adequate force is necessary to the existence of a legal blockade, and it was notorious, that if such a force had ever been applied, its long discontinuance had annulled the blockade in question, there could be no sufficient objection on the part of Great Britain, to a formal revocation of it; and no imaginable objection to a declaration of the fact that the blockade did not exist....
Side 188 - Isles, at a time when the naval force of that enemy dared not to issue from his own ports. She was reminded, without effect, that her own prior blockades, unsupported by an adequate naval force, actually applied and continued, were a bar to this plea; that executed edicts against millions of our property could not be retaliation on edicts confessedly impossible to be executed...