But a new kind of loyalty seems to be required of us, a loyalty to Parliament; a loyalty that is to extend, it is said, to a surrender of all our properties, whenever a House of Commons, (in which there is not a single member of our choosing) shall think... Hazard's Register of Pennsylvania - Sivu 1181832Koko teos - Tietoja tästä kirjasta
| 1880 - 698 sivua
...Parliament ; a loyalty that is to extend, it is said, to a surrender of all our properties, whenever a House of Commons, in which there is not a single member of our choosing, shall think fit to grant them away without our consent; and to a patient suffering the loss of our privileges as Englishmen,... | |
| Benjamin Franklin - 1906 - 592 sivua
...P[arliamen]t ; a loyalty that is to extend, it is said, to a surrender of all our properties, whenever a H[ouse] of C[ommons,] (in which there is not a single member of our choosing) shall think fit to grant them away without our consent ; and to a patient suffering the loss of our privileges as Englishmen,... | |
| Benjamin Franklin - 1906 - 580 sivua
...that is to extend, it is said, to a surrender of all our properties, whenever a Hfouse] of Cfommons,] (in which there is not a single member of our choosing) shall think fit to grant them away without our consent; and to a patient suffering the loss of our privileges as Englishmen,... | |
| J. Ellis Barker - 1910 - 398 sivua
...Parliament ; a loyalty that is to extend, it is said, to a surrender of all our properties, whenever a House of Commons, in which there is not a single member of our choosing, shall think fit to grant them away without our consent. We were separated too far from Britain by the ocean, but we were... | |
| Benjamin Franklin - 1927 - 298 sivua
...Parliament ; a loyalty that is to extend, it is said to a surrender of all our properties, whenever a House of Commons, in which there is not a single member of our choosing, shall think fit to grant them away without our consent ; and to a patient suffering the loss of our privileges as Englishmen,... | |
| Don Cook - 1995 - 446 sivua
...Parliament; a loyalty that is to extend, it seems, to a surrender of all our properties, whenever a House of Commons, in which there is not a single member of our choosing, shall think fit to grant them away without our consent, and to a patient suffering loss of our privileges as Englishmen,... | |
| Edmund Sears Morgan - 2003 - 356 sivua
...P[arliamen]t; a loyalty that is to extend, it is said, to a surrender of all our properties, whenever a H[ouse] of C[ommons], in which there is not a single member of our chusing, shall think fit to grant them away without our consent." Americans were united to Britain,... | |
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