The Speeches of the Right Honourable Charles James Fox, in the House of Commons ...Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, 1815 |
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Seite 23
... proceedings of the day , and advised the chan- cellor of the exchequer not to draw too flattering a presage from the circumstance . He put him in remembrance that the two last addresses at the opening of the two last sessions of the old ...
... proceedings of the day , and advised the chan- cellor of the exchequer not to draw too flattering a presage from the circumstance . He put him in remembrance that the two last addresses at the opening of the two last sessions of the old ...
Seite 33
... proceedings warranted such a belief ? Certainly they had not ; and when the minister , who , in- stead of an advocate , should have acted as a judge , mentioned St. Anne's parish , he should also have mentioned St. Martin's ; but that ...
... proceedings warranted such a belief ? Certainly they had not ; and when the minister , who , in- stead of an advocate , should have acted as a judge , mentioned St. Anne's parish , he should also have mentioned St. Martin's ; but that ...
Seite 35
... proceeding he conceived to be very disrespectful ; and were he inclined to make a compromise on the occasion , he would not treat the House with so much indignity as to make it a party to it . As to the proposal itself , he must say he ...
... proceeding he conceived to be very disrespectful ; and were he inclined to make a compromise on the occasion , he would not treat the House with so much indignity as to make it a party to it . As to the proposal itself , he must say he ...
Seite 36
... proceeding ; for it was very well known that the principal objections on both sides were to votes given , not by paupers , or non - entities , but by those who were not such resident householders as to be entitled to a vote . But what ...
... proceeding ; for it was very well known that the principal objections on both sides were to votes given , not by paupers , or non - entities , but by those who were not such resident householders as to be entitled to a vote . But what ...
Seite 38
... proceeding that disgraced it ; but how was that to he accomplished ? Was it by rejecting both law and reason ? By refusing to hear arguments that would make the absurdity of the proceeding appear in glaring colours ? The poor expedient ...
... proceeding that disgraced it ; but how was that to he accomplished ? Was it by rejecting both law and reason ? By refusing to hear arguments that would make the absurdity of the proceeding appear in glaring colours ? The poor expedient ...
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Beliebte Passagen
Seite 303 - ... the sacrament of the Lord's supper, according to the usage of the Church of England...
Seite 400 - Russell moved for a Committee of the whole House to take into consideration the state of Ireland.
Seite 430 - In the state of deep distress in which the prince and the whole royal family were involved, by the heavy calamity which has fallen upon the king, and at a moment when government, deprived of its chief energy and support, seemed peculiarly to need the cordial and united aid of all descriptions of good subjects, it was not expected by the prince that a plan should be offered to his consideration, by which government was to be rendered difficult, if not impracticable, in the hands of any person intended...
Seite 199 - The Speaker of the house of commons, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, the Master of the Rolls, the Governor and Deputy Governor of the Bank of England...
Seite 129 - ... to the other, except such as relate to corn, meal, malt, flour, and...
Seite 431 - ... the realm in a state of degradation, of curtailed authority, and diminished energy ; a state, hurtful in practice to the prosperity and good government of his people, and injurious in its precedent to the security of the monarch, and the rights of his family. " Upon that part of the plan which regards the King's real and personal property, the Prince feels himself compelled to remark, that it was not necessary for Mr. Pitt, nor proper, to suggest to the Prince the restraint he proposes against...
Seite 48 - That for the better protection of trade, whatever sum the gross hereditary revenue of this kingdom (after deducting all drawbacks, repayments, or bounties, granted in the nature of drawbacks) shall produce, over and above the sum of 656,000!.
Seite 430 - ... wholly groundless he trusts, in that quarter whose confidence it will ever be the first pride of his life to merit and obtain. " With regard to the motive and object of the limitations and restrictions proposed, the Prince can have but little to observe. No light or information is offered him by His Majesty's Ministers on these points.
Seite 430 - Prince makes the observation, that he sees, in the contents of that paper, a project for producing weakness, disorder, and insecurity in every branch of the administration of affairs. A project for dividing the Royal Family from each other...
Seite 144 - In pursuance of the directions of an Act, passed in the twenty-fourth year of the reign of His...