William Pitt. Charles James Fox. Sir James Mackintosh. Lord ErskineCharles Kendall Adams Putnam, 1892 |
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Charles Kendall Adams. LIBRARY NIVERSITY A18792 COPYRIGHT , 1884 BY G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS Press of G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS New York CONTENTS . WILLIAM PITT PAGE I WILLIAM PITT 19 ON.
Charles Kendall Adams. LIBRARY NIVERSITY A18792 COPYRIGHT , 1884 BY G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS Press of G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS New York CONTENTS . WILLIAM PITT PAGE I WILLIAM PITT 19 ON.
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... 21 , 1803 . LORD ERSKINE LORD ERSKINE ON THE LIMITATIONS of Free Speech ; Delivered in 1797 ON THE TRIAL OF WILLIAMS FOR PUBLICATION OF PAINE'S " AGE OF REASON . " E : iii 262 273 WILLIAM PITT . THE younger Pitt was the second son.
... 21 , 1803 . LORD ERSKINE LORD ERSKINE ON THE LIMITATIONS of Free Speech ; Delivered in 1797 ON THE TRIAL OF WILLIAMS FOR PUBLICATION OF PAINE'S " AGE OF REASON . " E : iii 262 273 WILLIAM PITT . THE younger Pitt was the second son.
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Charles Kendall Adams. WILLIAM PITT . THE younger Pitt was the second son of Lord Chatham , and was seven years of age when his father in 1766 was admitted to the peerage . The boy's earliest peculiarity was an absorbing ambition to ...
Charles Kendall Adams. WILLIAM PITT . THE younger Pitt was the second son of Lord Chatham , and was seven years of age when his father in 1766 was admitted to the peerage . The boy's earliest peculiarity was an absorbing ambition to ...
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... three mis- takes , and sometimes without even one . " At the university , where he remained nearly seven years , his course of study was carried on strictly in accordance with his father's directions and was somewhat 2 WILLIAM PITT .
... three mis- takes , and sometimes without even one . " At the university , where he remained nearly seven years , his course of study was carried on strictly in accordance with his father's directions and was somewhat 2 WILLIAM PITT .
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... Pitt had not read to him in this thorough and discriminating man- ner . " This was the laborious way in which he acquired that extraordinary and perhaps un- rivalled gift of pouring out for hour after hour an unbroken stream of thought ...
... Pitt had not read to him in this thorough and discriminating man- ner . " This was the laborious way in which he acquired that extraordinary and perhaps un- rivalled gift of pouring out for hour after hour an unbroken stream of thought ...
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aggression allies ambition ancient argument army atrocious attack Austria Bonaparte Bourbon cause character Chauvelin Christian circumstances civil Coalition conduct conquest consider Constitution court crimes Declaration of Pilnitz declared decree defence discussion enemy England English Erskine Europe existed faction feel foreign France French Revolution Genoa Holland hostility House of Bourbon House of Commons human indignation insult interest Jacobin JEAN PELTIER jury justice King language learned friend libel liberty Lord Lord Harvey Lord North Lord Shelburne Louis XIV Mackintosh mankind means ment military despotism ministers murder Napoleon nations nature negotiation never NOTE oath opinion orator peace Peltier Pitt political present pretended principles profession prosecution Prussia question reason refused religion Republic of Venice right honorable gentleman Scheldt sentiments sion sovereign speech spirit success thing tion treaty tyrants usurpation Venice violation vote writers