Annual Register, Nide 93Edmund Burke Rivingtons, 1852 |
Kirjan sisältä
Tulokset 6 - 10 kokonaismäärästä 100
Sivu 18
... course which the Government had been driven to . It was clear , too , that the act which had ren- dered this measure necessary was an illegal act . It had been likewise established that that act was not a spiritual act of a merely ...
... course which the Government had been driven to . It was clear , too , that the act which had ren- dered this measure necessary was an illegal act . It had been likewise established that that act was not a spiritual act of a merely ...
Sivu 21
... course which reason and policy dictated . Mr. Disraeli vindicated the character and the conduct of the British farmers from the stigma of sloth and want of skill , and characterized the outcry against rent , and the plea that this was a ...
... course which reason and policy dictated . Mr. Disraeli vindicated the character and the conduct of the British farmers from the stigma of sloth and want of skill , and characterized the outcry against rent , and the plea that this was a ...
Sivu 33
... course . The House then broke up . On the 24th both Houses were very fully attended . In the House of Lords , after the trans- action of some formal business , the Marquis of Lansdowne rose and said : - " My Lords , as there is no bu ...
... course . The House then broke up . On the 24th both Houses were very fully attended . In the House of Lords , after the trans- action of some formal business , the Marquis of Lansdowne rose and said : - " My Lords , as there is no bu ...
Sivu 34
... course of which I laid before Her Majesty , fully and unreservedly , what were my views of the present state of the country and of parties . No- thing could have exceeded the gra- ciousness , the condescension , in- deed , I may say ...
... course of which I laid before Her Majesty , fully and unreservedly , what were my views of the present state of the country and of parties . No- thing could have exceeded the gra- ciousness , the condescension , in- deed , I may say ...
Sivu 36
... course he adopted , had he not been con- vinced that he had acted according to the dictates of the soundest principles of wisdom and justice . Lord Stanley then rose , and proceeded to lay before the House the several steps of the ...
... course he adopted , had he not been con- vinced that he had acted according to the dictates of the soundest principles of wisdom and justice . Lord Stanley then rose , and proceeded to lay before the House the several steps of the ...
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adopted amendment appointed army Assembly authority Bill bishops Cabinet Caffre Cape ceeded Chancellor Changarnier Church coffee colony Committee considered Constitution Court Crown declared discussion Disraeli Duke duty Earl election electors England Exchequer Executive favour foreign France Government Herries honour House of Commons House of Lords House Tax Hume important Income Tax Ireland labour legislation Léon Faucher liberty Lord Aberdeen Lord Chancellor Lord John Russell Lord Palmerston Lord Stanley Lord Torrington Louis Napoleon Louis Napoleon Bonaparte Majesty Majesty's majority malt measure ment Minister Ministry motion moved nation noble Lord oath oath of abjuration object opinion opposed Parliament party political Pope present President principle proposed proposition public credit question reference repeal Republic resolution respect revenue Roman Catholic Rome Salomons second reading session sion Sir James Graham speech spirit statute supported surplus taxation thought tion vernment vote Window Tax
Suositut otteet
Sivu 287 - No duties of tonnage, harbour, pilotage, lighthouse, quarantine, or other similar or corresponding duties of whatever nature or under whatever denomination, levied in the name or for the profit of the Government, public functionaries, private individuals, Corporations, or establishments of any kind, shall be imposed in the ports of the...
Sivu 101 - He moved that the Bill be read a second time that day six months. The measure was supported by several Peers with the usual arguments.
Sivu 213 - In every regularly documented American merchant- vessel, the crew who navigate it will find their protection in the flag which is over them.
Sivu 26 - Fontenoy, where she received a bayonetwound in her arm. Her long life, which commenced in the reign of Queen Anne, extended to the reign of George IV. ; by whose munificence she received comfort and support in her latter years. She died at Brighton, where she had long resided, December 12, 1821, aged 108 years.
Sivu 213 - Friendly relations with all, but entangling alliances with none, has long been a maxim with us. Our true mission is not to propagate our opinions, or impose upon other countries our form of government, by artifice or force; but to teach by example, and show by our success, moderation and justice, the blessings of self-government, and the advantages of free institutions.
Sivu 287 - Her Majesty the Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, the Right Honourable Henry John Viscount Palmerston, Baron Temple, a Peer of Ireland, a Member of Her Britannic Majesty's Most Honourable Privy Council, a Member of Parliament...
Sivu 213 - Tehuantepec, under grants of the Mexican Government to a citizen of that Republic. It is understood that a thorough survey of the course of the communication is in preparation, and there is every reason to expect that it will be prosecuted with characteristic energy, especially when that Government...
Sivu 288 - An inquiry was made into the origin of this disaster; little information could be obtained ; but many very suspicious circumstances were brought out in regard to the fire in warehouse " D." 26. GREENWICH ELECTION. — The election of a member to serve in Parliament for the borough of Greenwich, in the room of Mr. Bernard deceased, commanded more than usual attention, from the religion of one of the candidates and the discussion to which it gave rise.
Sivu 213 - At first view this condition of our trade with foreign nations would seem to present the most flattering hopes of its future prosperity. An examination of the details of our exports, however, will show that the increased value of our exports for the last fiscal year is to be found in the high price of cotton which prevailed during the first half of that year, which price has since declined about one-half.