The New Annual Register, Or General Repository of History, Politics, and Literature, for the Year ...G. Robinson, Pater-noster-Row, 1805 |
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Side xxv
... considered religion as a divine philoso- phy , which existed only in the mind and spirit , and had no connection with external observances a pure and simple communication between God and our own souls . Thus he was more of a visionary ...
... considered religion as a divine philoso- phy , which existed only in the mind and spirit , and had no connection with external observances a pure and simple communication between God and our own souls . Thus he was more of a visionary ...
Side xxvii
... considered as a metaphysician , but he was also a political writer . He unquestionably possessed much learning , more thinking , and not a little know- ledge of the world . His style is incomparably better than that of any other writer ...
... considered as a metaphysician , but he was also a political writer . He unquestionably possessed much learning , more thinking , and not a little know- ledge of the world . His style is incomparably better than that of any other writer ...
Side 11
... considered the different situations of this country and of France , there was every thing to animate us . On the one side was glory , the respect and love of subjects , and the sinews of war ; on the other , hatred , insubordina- tion ...
... considered the different situations of this country and of France , there was every thing to animate us . On the one side was glory , the respect and love of subjects , and the sinews of war ; on the other , hatred , insubordina- tion ...
Side 17
... considered to be an attack upon the laws and li- berties of our country . The men , he said , who held the situation of conservators of the public safety , who bad the command of the ves- sel of the state , had criminally de- serted ...
... considered to be an attack upon the laws and li- berties of our country . The men , he said , who held the situation of conservators of the public safety , who bad the command of the ves- sel of the state , had criminally de- serted ...
Side 18
... considered a sudden act of injus- tice not that he meant to say the French had not been guilty of the most scandalous injustice in many respects before ; but the opposition of the Porte to the republic would discontinue the instant they ...
... considered a sudden act of injus- tice not that he meant to say the French had not been guilty of the most scandalous injustice in many respects before ; but the opposition of the Porte to the republic would discontinue the instant they ...
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The New Annual Register, Or General Repository of History, Politics, and ... Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1787 |
The New Annual Register, Or General Repository of History, Politics, and ... Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1801 |
The New Annual Register, Or General Repository of History, Politics, and ... Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1804 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
allies amount archduke arms artillery attack Austrian battalion Berne bill body Bonaparte brigade British Brune cantons capt captain Championet Cisalpine Cisalpine republic colonel column command considerable constitution corps coun council declared defended detached division duke earl enemy engaged English evacuated Evan Nepean execution favour flank fleet force formed France French army French directory French government French republic garrison Grisons guard guns honourable Ireland Irish Italy jacobin killed Kray land legislative liberty lieutenant Ligurian republic lord lordship majesty majesty's ship Mantua marched Massena measure ment Moreau Naples neral object officers parliament parliament of Ireland party passed peace persons port position possession posts present prince prisoners Radstadt received regiment resolution respect retreat Rhine royal Russian sent side sion Suwarrow Switzerland tain taken tion took Tortona treaty troops union vernment whole wounded Zurich
Populære avsnitt
Side 59 - His Majesty is persuaded that the unremitting industry with which our enemies persevere in their avowed design of effecting the separation of Ireland from this kingdom cannot fail to engage the particular attention of Parliament. And His Majesty recommends it...
Side 216 - I impeach him in the name of the Commons of Great Britain in parliament assembled, whose parliamentary trust he has betrayed. I impeach him in the name of all the Commons of Great Britain, whose national character he has dishonored. I impeach him in the name of the people of India, whose laws...
Side 68 - And will you maintain and preserve inviolably the settlement of the united Church of England and Ireland, and the doctrine, worship, discipline and government thereof, as by law established within England and Ireland and the territories thereunto belonging?
Side 118 - I have the honour to acquaint you, for the information of my Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty, that at 5 o'clock PM on the 6th of August last, in latitude 24° 44...
Side 68 - ... for a time to be limited, such a moderate rate of equal duties as shall, previous to the union, be agreed upon and approved by the respective parliaments, subject, after the expiration of such limited time, to be, diminished equally with respect to both kingdoms, but in no case to be increased ; that all articles which may at any time hereafter be imported into Great Britain from foreign parts, shall be...
Side 68 - January one thousand eight hundred and one, be entitled to the same privileges, and be on the same footing, as to encouragements and bounties on the like articles being the growth, produce, or manufacture, of either country respectively, and generally in respect of trade and navigation in all ports and places in the united kingdom and its dependencies; and that in all treaties made by his Majesty, his heirs...
Side 126 - ... them lay headless corpses, the sabre, with the addition of a dagger in the other hand, proving more than a match for the bayonet...
Side 129 - Pasha met me) serves as an asylum for all religions and every description of the surviving inhabitants. The heaps of unburied Frenchmen lying on the bodies of those whom they massacred two months ago, afford another proof of Divine justice, which has caused these murderers to perish by the infection arising from their own atrocious act.
Side 65 - ... he admitted the rights of the parliament of Ireland, he felt that, as a 'member of parliament of Great Britain, he had a right to exercise, and a duty to perform, viz. to express the general nature and outline of the plan, which, in his estimation, would tend to insure the safety and the happiness of the two kingdoms. Should parliament be of opinion that it was calculated to produce mutual advantage to the two kingdoms, he should propose it...
Side 123 - I had the honour to inform your lordship, by my letter of the second instant, that we were busily employed completing two ravelins for the reception of cannon, to flank the enemy's nearest approaches, distant only ten yards from them. They were attacked that very night, and almost every night since, but the enemy have each time been repulsed with very considerable loss.