Annual Register, Band 53Edmund Burke 1825 |
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Seite v
... important additions to the constitutional law of the country , and will doubtless be resorted to as precedents on any future occurrence of a similar kind . Among the domestic events of the year , the efforts of the Irish catholics to ...
... important additions to the constitutional law of the country , and will doubtless be resorted to as precedents on any future occurrence of a similar kind . Among the domestic events of the year , the efforts of the Irish catholics to ...
Seite vi
Edmund Burke. memento of no small importance by those who look up to that act for their protection in the privileges they are permitted to enjoy . In the debates on these several points it will be impossible not to per- ceive an approach ...
Edmund Burke. memento of no small importance by those who look up to that act for their protection in the privileges they are permitted to enjoy . In the debates on these several points it will be impossible not to per- ceive an approach ...
Seite 7
... important of those relating to the Regent himself are the follow- ing - He is to exercise in the name of his Majesty the royal authority belonging to the crown . He is to be deemed a person hold- ing an office in trust , and is to ...
... important of those relating to the Regent himself are the follow- ing - He is to exercise in the name of his Majesty the royal authority belonging to the crown . He is to be deemed a person hold- ing an office in trust , and is to ...
Seite 8
... important affair of the re- storation of the King to authority is provided for in the following manner : The Queen's council are to meet from time to time , and make a declaration of the state of his Majesty's health , of which a copy ...
... important affair of the re- storation of the King to authority is provided for in the following manner : The Queen's council are to meet from time to time , and make a declaration of the state of his Majesty's health , of which a copy ...
Seite 9
... important objects . In the address he said he could not con- cur , provided it were considered as a pledge to persist in the con- test in the peninsula , concerning which he thought that the house had not heard enough to satisfy those ...
... important objects . In the address he said he could not con- cur , provided it were considered as a pledge to persist in the con- test in the peninsula , concerning which he thought that the house had not heard enough to satisfy those ...
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appeared arms army artillery attack bank Bank of England bart bill boat body brigade British Capt Captain Catholic cavalry Chancellor charge Colonel command committee consequence corps council court crew daugh daughter defendant division Dublin Duke duty Earl effect enemy enemy's England escape fire force France French frigate garrison guns honour horse House of Commons House of Lords infantry Ireland Irish island John killed King Lady land late Lieut Lieutenant Lord Lord Wellington lordship loss Majesty Majesty's ship Major Major-General March Marshal Soult ment ministers morning motion neral night o'clock occasion officers orders in council parliament party passed persons port Portuguese present Prince Regent prisoners proceeded proposed rank and file received regiment respect Royal Highness royal marines sent sion Spanish tain taken tion took town troops vessels whole wife William wounded
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 266 - And whereas the Senate of the United States have approved of the said arrangement and recommended that it should be carried into effect, the same having also received the sanction of His Royal Highness, the Prince Regent, acting in the name and on the behalf of His...
Seite 141 - That the President of the United States be, and he hereby is authorized, in case either France or Great Britain shall so revoke or modify her edicts, as that they shall cease to violate the neutral commerce of the United States...
Seite 208 - AN Act to indemnify such Persons in the United Kingdom as have omitted to qualify themselves for offices and employments, and for extending the time limited for those purposes respectively...
Seite 147 - With this evidence of hostile inflexibility, in trampling on rights which no independent nation can relinquish, Congress will feel the duty of putting the United States into an armour, and an attitude demanded by the crisis, and corresponding with the national spirit and expectations.
Seite 36 - Martin gave notice of his intention to move for leave to bring in a bill to explain and amend the act of the 39th of the king relative to this subject.
Seite 326 - ... wearing an uniform added greatly to his natural awkwardness, for he wore it like a grocer of the trained bands. Sinclair was a Lieutenant-general, and was sent to the courts of Vienna and Turin, as a military envoy, to see that their quota of troops was furnished by the Austrians and Piedmontese. It was, therefore, thought necessary that his secretary should appear to be an officer, and Hume was accordingly disguised in scarlet.
Seite 330 - Union between that country and England. 'Were I an Irishman', said he, 'I should certainly wish for it; and, as a general lover of liberty, I sincerely desire it; and for this plain reason, that an inferior country, connected with one much her superior in force, can never be certain of the permanent enjoyment of constitutional freedom, unless she has, by her representatives, a proportional share in the legislature of the superior kingdom.
Seite 201 - George 4th, intituled an act for taking an account of the population of Great Britain and of the increase or diminution thereof (1831).
Seite 326 - His face was broad and fat, his mouth wide, and without any other expression than that of imbecility. His eyes vacant and spiritless ; and the corpulence of his whole person was far better fitted to communicate the idea of a turtle-eating alderman than of a refined philosopher.
Seite 327 - In London, where he often did me the honour to communicate the manuscripts of his additional essays, before their publication, I have sometimes, in the course of our intimacy, asked him whether he thought that, if his opinions were universally to take place, mankind would not be rendered more unhappy than they now were ; and whether he did not suppose that the curb of religion was necessary to human nature ? * The objections...