The New annual register, or General repository of history, politics, and literature, 13. köide1793 |
Contents
1 | |
34 | |
38 | |
58 | |
83 | |
98 | |
114 | |
167 | |
22 | |
35 | |
45 | |
51 | |
59 | |
65 | |
72 | |
76 | |
31 | |
51 | |
57 | |
64 | |
72 | |
80 | |
86 | |
92 | |
99 | |
105 | |
109 | |
116 | |
126 | |
133 | |
145 | |
3 | |
16 | |
81 | |
86 | |
101 | |
113 | |
124 | |
142 | |
149 | |
156 | |
163 | |
171 | |
180 | |
188 | |
195 | |
202 | |
208 | |
219 | |
325 | |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
able affembly againſt alfo appeared arms army attack attempt authority body called carried caufe citizens command commons conduct confidered conftitution continued court danger decree defend duty effect enemy entered equal Europe faid fame favour fent feveral fhall fhould fire fome foon force foreign formed France French friends ftate fubject fuch fupport give given guards hands himſelf honour hope houfe houſe immediately important intereft Italy John juftice king kingdom Lady laft late laws letter liberty lord majefty manner March means meaſures meeting ment minifter moft moſt nation nature never obferved object occafion officers opinion paffed Paris parliament party peace perfons political prefent princes principles proceeded received refpect royal taken thefe themfelves theſe thing thofe thought tion troops whofe whole
Popular passages
Page 181 - In the beginning was the word, and the word was with God, and God was the word. This was in the beginning with God.
Page 182 - He was in the world: and the world was made by him: and the world knew him not. He came unto his own: and his own received him not. But as many as received him, he gave them power to be made the sons of God, to them that believe in his name.
Page 59 - An Act to explain and amend an act made in the twenty-second year of the reign of His late Majesty King George the Second, intituled, ' An Act for amending, explaining, and reducing into one Act of Parliament the laws relating to the government of His Majesty's ships, vessels, and forces by sea...
Page 33 - As to Jortin, whether I look back to his verse, to his prose, to his critical, or to his theological works, there are few authors to whom I am so much indebted for rational entertainment, or for solid instruction.
Page 33 - I can easily defend it ; but when they recur to these facts, and show me how we may be doomed to all the horrors of war by the caprice of an individual who will not even condescend to explain his...
Page 62 - Gentlemen of the House of Commons, " I have ordered the proper officers to lay before you the national accounts, and I...
Page 134 - That, drawn into the present war by irresistible circumstances, the two allied courts have no other object in view than the welfare of France, without any pretence to enrich -themselves by making conquests.
Page 59 - An Act for amending and reducing into one Act of Parliament the Laws relating to the Militia in that part of Great Britain called England...
Page 134 - ... and property of all Frenchmen, until the arrival of the troops belonging to their Imperial and Royal Majesties, or until orders be given to the contrary, on pain of being personally responsible: that, on the contrary, such national guards...
Page 135 - ... royal persons, that inviolability and respect which are due by the laws of nature and of nations to sovereigns ; their imperial and royal majesties making personally responsible for all events, on pain of losing their heads, pursuant to military trials, without hopes of pardon, all the members of the National Assembly, of...