The Speeches of the Right Honourable Henry Grattan: In the Irish, and in the Imperial Parliament, Band 2Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme and Brown, 1822 - 468 Seiten |
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Seite 8
... ground to the earth ; we have admitted the fact of distress . We have gone farther , we have acknowledged that this distress should make some part of our Parliamentary enquiry , we have thought proper , indeed , to postpone the day ...
... ground to the earth ; we have admitted the fact of distress . We have gone farther , we have acknowledged that this distress should make some part of our Parliamentary enquiry , we have thought proper , indeed , to postpone the day ...
Seite 12
... grounds for such an investigation ; the distress of the clergy , and the distress of the people . Against your interference three arguments are objected , two of which are fictitious , and one only is sincere . The sincere , but ...
... grounds for such an investigation ; the distress of the clergy , and the distress of the people . Against your interference three arguments are objected , two of which are fictitious , and one only is sincere . The sincere , but ...
Seite 15
... ground to suppose that I have taken up the subject without the most mature con- sideration , or that I would hazard such a motion without duly considering its consequences . This is not the case ; and , therefore , it is not the ...
... ground to suppose that I have taken up the subject without the most mature con- sideration , or that I would hazard such a motion without duly considering its consequences . This is not the case ; and , therefore , it is not the ...
Seite 16
... ground to the earth with oppression ; after we had passed a law to shoot , and to hang , and to whip , and to banish , and to imprison them , could it be thought too soon to enquire into their grievances ? It might , indeed , be too ...
... ground to the earth with oppression ; after we had passed a law to shoot , and to hang , and to whip , and to banish , and to imprison them , could it be thought too soon to enquire into their grievances ? It might , indeed , be too ...
Seite 20
... ground of doubt is Mr. Yelverton's bill ; the clause in this bill is equality ; it enacts such com- mercial and navigation laws , as import to confer the same benefits , and impose the same restrictions . Had the navi- gation act been ...
... ground of doubt is Mr. Yelverton's bill ; the clause in this bill is equality ; it enacts such com- mercial and navigation laws , as import to confer the same benefits , and impose the same restrictions . Had the navi- gation act been ...
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The Speeches of the Right Honourable Henry Grattan in the Irish, and in the ... Henry Grattan Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2013 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
acre act of navigation act of Parliament amendment appointed argument assertion Attorney-general authority Ayes barren land bill bishops Britain British Catholic charge church clause clergy of Munster commissioners committee constitution corrupt court Crown Curran declared Defence demand deny diocese duty England English enquire establishment excise expence flax gentlemen George Ponsonby give granted GRATTAN House of Commons impeachable increase influence Ireland Irish justice King kingdom labour Lord Lord-lieutenant Majesty Majesty's Marquis of Buckingham measure ment minister modus motion nation necessary Noes oath oats object offences officers opposed oppression parish Parliament parochial clergy peerage pension list persons petition police Ponsonby poor potatoes present Prince of Wales principle proceedings proposed Protestant Protestant ascendancy prove question ratages Regent regulation religion resolution revenue right honourable gentleman Royal assent Royal Highness salaries session suppose tion tithe tithe-farmer trade viceroy vote
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 344 - To prepare such an assembly as this, and endeavour to set up the declared abettors of his own will, for the true representatives of the people, and the law-makers of the society, is certainly as great a breach of trust, and as perfect a declaration of a design to subvert the government, as is possible to be met with.
Seite 55 - Beware of covetousness ; seek not what ye shall eat, but seek the kingdom of God." " Give alms, provide yourselves with bags that wax not old ; a treasure in heaven which faileth not." This does not look like a right in the 'Christian priesthood to the tenth of the goods of the comrannity exempted from the poor's dividend. " Distribute unto the poor, and seek treasure in heaven." " Take care that your hearts be not charged with surfeiting and drunkenness, and the cares of this life.
Seite 133 - Majesty's resuming the personal eyerc'se of his royal 'authority, may then render it only necessary for me to repeat those sentiments of gratitude- and affection for the loyal and generous people of Ireland which 1 feel indelibly imorinted on my heart.
Seite 344 - I answer such revolutions happen not upon every little mismanagement in public affairs. Great mistakes in the ruling part, many wrong and inconvenient laws, and all the slips of human frailty will be borne by the people without mutiny or murmur.
Seite 364 - An ascendancy of that form raises to my mind a little greasy emblem of stall-fed theology, imported from some foreign land, with the graces of a lady's maid, the dignity of a side-table, the temperance of a larder, its sobriety the dregs of a patron's bottle, and its wisdom the dregs of a patron's understanding, brought hither to devour, to degrade, and to defame.
Seite 344 - Thus to regulate candidates and electors, and new-model the ways of election, what is it but to cut up the government by the roots, and poison the very fountain of public security?
Seite 120 - ... require, it is expedient that his Royal Highness the Prince of Wales, being resident within the realm, shall be empowered to exercise and administer the royal authority, according to the laws and constitution of Great Britain, in the name and on...
Seite 56 - Christianity declined ; then indeed the right of tithe was advanced, and advanced into a style that damned it. The preachers who advanced the doctrine placed all Christian' virtue in the payment of tithe. They said that the Christian religion, as we say the Protestant religion , depended on it. They said, that those who paid not their tithes , would be found guilty before God; and if they did not give; the tenth, that God would reduce the country to a tenth. Blasphemous preachers. ...gross ignorance...
Seite 344 - For the people, having reserved to themselves the choice of their representatives as the fence to their properties, could do it for no other end but that they might always be freely chosen and, so chosen, freely act and advise as the necessity of the commonwealth and the public good should upon examination and mature debate be judged to require.
Seite 344 - ... threats, promises, or otherwise won to his designs and employs them to bring in such who have promised beforehand what to vote and what to enact.