Memoirs and Correspondence of Francis Horner, M.P.Little, Brown, 1853 |
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Side xii
... give rise to ; Collins's Ode on the Superstitions in the Highlands ; Travels in France , by Mr. Alison ; visit to Sir James Mack- intosh 247. * TO LADY HOLLAND . Condemnation of one who had accepted a political appointment improperly ...
... give rise to ; Collins's Ode on the Superstitions in the Highlands ; Travels in France , by Mr. Alison ; visit to Sir James Mack- intosh 247. * TO LADY HOLLAND . Condemnation of one who had accepted a political appointment improperly ...
Side 8
... give the ministers the majority they had , when added to their crowd of corrupt , devoted , or unthinking parti- sans . Perhaps , this is far from being the only instance that might be mentioned , in which well - meaning and ...
... give the ministers the majority they had , when added to their crowd of corrupt , devoted , or unthinking parti- sans . Perhaps , this is far from being the only instance that might be mentioned , in which well - meaning and ...
Side 13
... give me a still greater bias . Then there are Romilly and Wilson the other way , and the latter especially has great weight with me , so much am I the slave of authority on such occasions ; but in such an emergency , when my oracles give ...
... give me a still greater bias . Then there are Romilly and Wilson the other way , and the latter especially has great weight with me , so much am I the slave of authority on such occasions ; but in such an emergency , when my oracles give ...
Side 16
... give the court an opportunity of deciding against the claim . These lawyers and the republicans are in unison about this . The ministers , and we who concurred with them , think the Court will respect the privilege . The more rigid ...
... give the court an opportunity of deciding against the claim . These lawyers and the republicans are in unison about this . The ministers , and we who concurred with them , think the Court will respect the privilege . The more rigid ...
Side 18
... give them at length that definition . We have defined prerogative , which was , perhaps , a bold experi- ment in government ; the success of it may satisfy us that there is no hazard in bringing privilege , if it be yet to bring ...
... give them at length that definition . We have defined prerogative , which was , perhaps , a bold experi- ment in government ; the success of it may satisfy us that there is no hazard in bringing privilege , if it be yet to bring ...
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affectionately appear argument Babbacombe Bay believe Bill Brougham Bullion Catholic character circumstances committee conduct considerable course court Dartmoor dear Horner dear Murray dear Sir debate delighted Discourses on Livy DUGALD STEWART Edinburgh England expect father favour feel France friends give grauwacke hear heard honourable hope House of Commons House of Lords interest Ireland J. A. MURRAY judges King labour Lady Holland late LETTER liberty limestone Lincoln's Lincoln's Inn London look Lord Castlereagh Lord Grenville LORD HOLLAND Lord William Bentinck manner ment mind Minehead ministers never night occasion opinion Paris Parliament particular party passed persons Playfair political present Prince principles question reason Report resolutions respect Scotland seems sentiments session sincere sort speech Stewart tell thing tion Torquay treaty vote WEBB SEYMOUR Whig whole wish write
Populære avsnitt
Side xi - REPORT FROM THE SELECT COMMITTEE ON THE HIGH PRICE OF GOLD BULLION. Ordered, by the House of Commons, to be printed, 8 Jime, 1810. THE SELECT COMMITTEE appointed to enquire into the cause of the High Price of Gold Bullion, and to take into consideration the state of the Circulating Medium, and of the Exchanges between Great Britain and Foreign Parts...
Side 43 - That in order to revert gradually to this security, and to enforce meanwhile a due limitation of the paper of the Bank of England, as well as of all the other bank paper of the country, it is expedient to amend the act which suspends the cash payments of the Bank, by altering the time, till which the suspension shall continue, from six months after the ratification of a definitive treaty of peace, to that of two years from the present time.
Side 357 - That an humble address be presented to his majesty, that he will be graciously pleased to give directions that there be laid before this house, copies of...
Side xix - Whether such a state of things be more or less expedient, than that other, more agreeable at least to the theory of the constitution, in which the parliament should exercise its controlling and inquisitorial functions, by adhering, as nearly as human nature will permit, to the exercise of a sort of judicial opinion upon the merits of each particular measure of government, is a speculative question of some curiosity and difficulty. That it is not wholly a speculative question, however, may be seen...
Side 91 - Ireland, with a view to such a final and conciliatory adjustment as may be conducive to the peace and strength of the United Kingdom, to the stability of the Protestant establishment, and to the general satisfaction and concord of all classes of His Majesty's subjects.
Side 205 - After I had been five days engaged with the prosecution of my object, I found that the best cases, that is, the most horrid wounds left totally without assistance, were to be found in the hospital of the French wounded. This hospital was only forming; they were even then bringing these poor creatures in from the woods. It is impossible to convey to you the picture of human misery continually before my eyes. What was heart-rending in the day, was intolerable at night; and I rose and...
Side 91 - Parliament and the press, where the great interests of j ustice and liberty are the subject of controversy ; and what a pride it is for England, to have such a controversy leading slowly but surely to the truth, and to one of the most signal ameliorations of government in favour of * Upon a motion of Mr.
Side 301 - ... firmness of his excellent and enlightened understanding. I may, perhaps, be permitted, without penetrating too far into the more sequestered paths of private life, to allude to those mild virtues — those domestic charities, which embellished while they dignified his private character. I may be permitted to observe, that, as a son and as a brother, he was eminently dutiful and affectionate : but I am aware that these qualities, however amiable, can hardly, with strict propriety, be addressed...
Side 392 - House did grant what the Chancellor of the Exchequer proposed, they would in fact pass a bill to continue the restriction for ever. He must be an idle dreamer who could suppose, after what had passed, that the Chancellor of the Exchequer or the Bank directors ever meant to resume cash payments at all. If, then, this bill were sanctioned, as a matter of course, they made the system permanent. They set their seal to it, and must answer to the "country for the consequences. He should now move, " That...