History of England, A.D. 1800-1815; an intr. to The history of the peaceG. Bell and Sons, 1878 - 548 sider |
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Side 5
... commons ruined , numbers of villages were burnt , and towns impoverished . Civil order was lost in a total anarchy : in a word , the desolation was universal . " He lent money to the towns , settled destitute people in the wastes ...
... commons ruined , numbers of villages were burnt , and towns impoverished . Civil order was lost in a total anarchy : in a word , the desolation was universal . " He lent money to the towns , settled destitute people in the wastes ...
Side 15
... Commons when the Bill was committed . The fiercer the severity on the part of the government , the stronger grew the resentment of the people ; and " the spread of revolutionary principles " -the thing dreaded - was stimulated by ...
... Commons when the Bill was committed . The fiercer the severity on the part of the government , the stronger grew the resentment of the people ; and " the spread of revolutionary principles " -the thing dreaded - was stimulated by ...
Side 25
... Commons was returned almost entirely by the Orange interest . It was believed that about three - fourths of the 300 members were of the Orange party : and not less than 100 were place- men or pensioners in the direct interest of the ...
... Commons was returned almost entirely by the Orange interest . It was believed that about three - fourths of the 300 members were of the Orange party : and not less than 100 were place- men or pensioners in the direct interest of the ...
Side 27
... Commons . The Pro- testant churches of the two countries were to be united . The two countries were to be on equal terms as regarded trade and navigation , and treaties with foreign powers . The laws and courts of both kingdoms were to ...
... Commons . The Pro- testant churches of the two countries were to be united . The two countries were to be on equal terms as regarded trade and navigation , and treaties with foreign powers . The laws and courts of both kingdoms were to ...
Side 28
... Commons was in the midst of the business which at the time chiefly occupied the King's mind , and which he was impatient for the legislature to resume - the passing of measures restrictive on the use of flour , on account of the ...
... Commons was in the midst of the business which at the time chiefly occupied the King's mind , and which he was impatient for the legislature to resume - the passing of measures restrictive on the use of flour , on account of the ...
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
Addington affairs Allies American amidst appeared army arrived Austria Badajoz battle Bill British brought Cabinet campaign Catholics century Ciudad Rodrigo command declared defence Duke Duke of York Edition Emperor enemy England English Engravings Europe force France French friends frontier heart History honour hope House India Ireland Irish King King's knew letter lived London Lord Castlereagh Lord Eldon Lord Grenville Lord Malmesbury Lord Melville Lord Sidmouth Lord Wellesley Madrid Mahratta March Memoir ment military mind Minister Ministry morning Napoleon nation never night Opposition Paris parliament party passed peace Peninsula Peninsular War Perceval Pitt Pitt's political popular Portrait ports Portugal present Prince Princess prisoners Regent retreat river Romilly royal Russia seemed sent ships soldiers soon Soult sovereign Spain Spanish spirit thing thought tion took Translated treaty troops victory vols Wellington whole
Populære avsnitt
Side 317 - The Earl of Chatham, with his sword drawn Stood waiting for Sir Richard Strachan ; Sir Richard, longing to be at 'em, Stood waiting for the Earl of Chatham.
Side 375 - At the same time the Prince owes it to the truth and sincerity of character, which, he trusts, will appear in every action of his life, in whatever situation placed, explicitly to declare, that the irresistible impulse of filial duty and affection to his beloved and afflicted father, leads him to dread that any act of the Regent might, in the smallest degree, have the effect of interfering with the progress of his Sovereign's recovery. This consideration alone dictates the decision now communicated...