The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, 40. köide |
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Page 19
... ground then do you place the Protestant church by that argument ? -You make it incompatible with the civil rights of the people who pay that church ; you make it incompatible with your own gospel ; you place the Protestant church in ...
... ground then do you place the Protestant church by that argument ? -You make it incompatible with the civil rights of the people who pay that church ; you make it incompatible with your own gospel ; you place the Protestant church in ...
Page 37
... ground for inquiry . It cannot be denied that we ought , distinctly and without the necessity of a long legal research , to know what and which decla- rations are in force , and by whom and when they ought to be taken ; declarations too ...
... ground for inquiry . It cannot be denied that we ought , distinctly and without the necessity of a long legal research , to know what and which decla- rations are in force , and by whom and when they ought to be taken ; declarations too ...
Page 59
... ground of objection which he felt to the concession was , the feelings of the Roman Catholics themselves ; and he confessed , that this operated with him far more than either of the other grounds which he had stated . All the petitions ...
... ground of objection which he felt to the concession was , the feelings of the Roman Catholics themselves ; and he confessed , that this operated with him far more than either of the other grounds which he had stated . All the petitions ...
Page 71
... ground for continuing the disabilities which ex- tend to all . But I have no hesitation in saying , that their recent conduct has affecting a sort of innocent astonishment that the Catholics should not be perfectly satisfied to remain a ...
... ground for continuing the disabilities which ex- tend to all . But I have no hesitation in saying , that their recent conduct has affecting a sort of innocent astonishment that the Catholics should not be perfectly satisfied to remain a ...
Page 77
... ground as they now have ; let it not be spread among them that they are persecuted for their religion , and you will remove one ground of their increase . They have not only strength in numbers , but in wealth ; and if they cannot be ...
... ground as they now have ; let it not be spread among them that they are persecuted for their religion , and you will remove one ground of their increase . They have not only strength in numbers , but in wealth ; and if they cannot be ...
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Common terms and phrases
adopted alluded amount argument army Bank of England bill bullion burgh called cash payments chancellor church circulation circumstances coin committee conduct consideration considered coun currency debt declaration duty effect establishment evil exchequer existing farther favour feel foreign gentleman give honour House increase interest Ireland Irish issues learned lord loan Lord Castlereagh lord chancellor lord Liverpool lordships lottery majesty's means measure ment millions ministers mittee motion necessary neral noble earl noble lord oath oath of supremacy object occasion opinion paper Parga parliament peace Penryn period persons petition petitioners present price of gold principle proposed Protestant question racter reduced repeal resolutions respect resumption of cash revenue right hon Roman Catholic Scotland seignorage silver sinking fund sion Spain taken thought tion transubstantiation vote whole window tax wished
Popular passages
Page 881 - Colony, Province, or Part of any Province or People, or of any Person or Persons exercising or assuming to exercise any Powers of Government in or over any Foreign State, Colony, Province, or Part of any Province or People...
Page 999 - June, the House having resolved itself into a Committee of Ways and Means, the Chancellor of the Exchequer rose...
Page 881 - ... the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, or in any part of His Majesty's dominions elsewhere...
Page 565 - Catholic claims, and shall conclude this day, by moving that this House will resolve itself into a committee of the whole House, to consider of the state of the representation.
Page 679 - He was required to define wh«t he meant by the pound. His answer was, " I find it difficult to explain it, but every gentleman in England knows it." The committee repeated the question, and Mr. Smith answered, " It is something that has existed without variation in this country for eight hundred years — three hundred years before the introduction of gold.
Page 31 - And I do declare, That no foreign prince, person, prelate, state, or potentate hath, or ought to have any jurisdiction, power, superiority, pre-eminence, or authority ecclesiastical or spiritual, within this realm : So help me God.
Page 687 - ... as it is incumbent on them to consider the effect of any measure to be adopted, as operating upon the general issue of their notes, by which all the private banks are regulated, and of which the whole currency, exclusive of the notes of private bankers, is composed, they feel themselves obliged...
Page 673 - I well remember, when the near and dear relation alluded to was a child, I observed to some friends that the man who discharged his duty to his country in the manner Mr Pitt had done, was...
Page 151 - ... considered the matters to them referred, and have agreed upon the...
Page 881 - Act, in as full and ample a manner to all intents and purposes as if the same privileges and protections were repeated and re-enacted in this Act.