Memoirs of the Public Life and Administration of the Right Honourable, the Earl of LiverpoolSaunders and Otley, 1827 - 649 sider |
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Side x
... British press . - Lord Hawkesbury's reply to this and other com- plaints of the French Government . - Prosecution of M. Peltier.— French attack on Switzerland . - Buonaparte's attempt to establish Agents in the British Ports , and to ...
... British press . - Lord Hawkesbury's reply to this and other com- plaints of the French Government . - Prosecution of M. Peltier.— French attack on Switzerland . - Buonaparte's attempt to establish Agents in the British Ports , and to ...
Side xi
... British supplies and forces . - Battle of Waterloo . - Lord Wellington and Mar- shal Blucher proceed towards Paris . - Convention of Paris . - Louis XVIII . resumes the Government . - Buonaparte surrenders to Captain Maitland . He is ...
... British supplies and forces . - Battle of Waterloo . - Lord Wellington and Mar- shal Blucher proceed towards Paris . - Convention of Paris . - Louis XVIII . resumes the Government . - Buonaparte surrenders to Captain Maitland . He is ...
Side 13
... British coinage ; " - " a considerable body of information upon this interesting topic , derived from original sources , to which few au- thors can have access ; " and " some counsels re- lative to the farther reformation of the ...
... British coinage ; " - " a considerable body of information upon this interesting topic , derived from original sources , to which few au- thors can have access ; " and " some counsels re- lative to the farther reformation of the ...
Side 23
... British court . Russia wisely foresaw that she was not able to carry on a war against Great Britain , Sweden , and Turkey , at the same time , and therefore granted to Sweden all the terms of the status quo . Hence arose benefits that ...
... British court . Russia wisely foresaw that she was not able to carry on a war against Great Britain , Sweden , and Turkey , at the same time , and therefore granted to Sweden all the terms of the status quo . Hence arose benefits that ...
Side 35
... British Colonies in the West In- dies , " was lost by a majority of 75 votes ; only 88 members voting for it , and 163 against it . In the early part of the session of 1792 , up- wards of 500 petitions for the abolition of this traffic ...
... British Colonies in the West In- dies , " was lost by a majority of 75 votes ; only 88 members voting for it , and 163 against it . In the early part of the session of 1792 , up- wards of 500 petitions for the abolition of this traffic ...
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Memoirs of the Public Life and Administration of the Right Honourable, the ... Robert Banks Jenkinson Earl of Liverpool Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1827 |
Memoirs of the Public Life and Administration of the Right ..., Volum 10 Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1827 |
Memoirs of the Public Life and Administration of the Right Honourable, the ... Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1827 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
Administration admitted adopted adverted affairs allies army Austria Bank bill Britain British Buonaparte Catholics Chancellor circumstances Committee conduct consideration considered constitution contended continued debate declared defence Denmark Duke duty Earl of Liverpool effect enemy England establishment Europe Exchequer expedition farther favour February force foreign France French Government Grey ground Holland hostilities House of Commons House of Lords important interests Ireland Jenkinson King King's late Lord Castlereagh Lord Grenville Lord Hawkesbury Lord Holland Lord Liverpool Lord Sidmouth Lord Wellington Lordship Majesty March measure ment military motion moved nation negotiation neutral never noble Lord noble Marquess object observed occasion opinion Parliament party peace Perceval period persons Pitt ports Portugal present Prince Regent principle proposed question reply respect right honourable Royal Highness Russia session Sheridan ships sion Spain Spanish speech Sweden thought tion trade treaty voted Wellesley whole
Populære avsnitt
Side 477 - That an humble address be presented to His Royal Highness the Prince Regent to...
Side 109 - 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 572 - ... its merchants, who paid a heavy price for labour, to compete with those of other nations, who paid but a trifle for it. Did his noble friend conceive, that the commercial greatness of England had arisen from any superior advantage in its climate, any superior fertility in its soil ? No. He might go to the east or to the west, to the north or to the south...
Side 385 - Highness effectually to maintain the great and important interests of the United Kingdom. " And Mr. Perceval humbly trusts, that whatever doubts your Royal Highness may entertain with respect to the constitutional propriety of the measures which have been adopted, your Royal Highness will feel assured that they could not have been recommended by his Majesty's servants, nor sanctioned by Parliament, but upon the sincere, though possibly erroneous, conviction, that they in no degree trenched upon the...
Side 135 - ... more, free from objection, and more effectual in itself, than any which now exists ; — and which would, at the same time, admit of extending such indulgences as must conciliate the higher orders of the Catholics, and by furnishing to a large class of your Majesty's Irish subjects a proof of the...
Side 44 - ... that nation which calls herself the most free and the most happy of them all. Even if these miserable beings were proved guilty of every crime before you take them off (of which, however, not a single proof is adduced), ought we to take upon ourselves the office of executioners ? And even if we condescend so far, still can we be justified in taking them, unless we have clear proof that they are criminals ? But if we go much...
Side 612 - Faithful to the principles which his Majesty has promulgated to the world, as constituting the rule of his conduct, his Majesty declined being a party to any proceedings at Verona, which could be deemed an interference in the internal concerns of Spain on the part of Foreign Powers.
Side 134 - ... that if such an Oath, containing (among other provisions) a denial of the power of Absolution from its obligations, is not a security from Catholics, the sacramental test is not more so : — that the political circumstances under which the exclusive laws originated...
Side 166 - This, it was true, had been found unattainable; but we had the satisfaction of knowing, that we had survived the violence of the revolutionary fever, and we had seen the extent of its principles abated. We...
Side 639 - That, through a determined and persevering, but at the same time judicious and temperate enforcement of such measures, this House looks forward to a progressive improvement in the character of the slave population, such as may prepare them for a participation in those civil rights and privileges which are enjoyed by other classes of His Majesty's subjects.