The Annual Register of World Events: A Review of the Year, 48. köideEdmund Burke Longmans, Green, 1808 |
From inside the book
Results 6-10 of 100
Page 103
... cause , than obtain a temporary victory over his oppo- nents at the hazard of alienating and offending his friends , or of ap pearing to the country to have de serted the principles , which he has professed . It is at the same time true ...
... cause , than obtain a temporary victory over his oppo- nents at the hazard of alienating and offending his friends , or of ap pearing to the country to have de serted the principles , which he has professed . It is at the same time true ...
Page 127
... Cause 254 : against it 125 ; majo . 129. The ministers wished to have the clause read a second te the same night , but after the bouse had been made to divide seven tzes in order to prevent it , they were compelled to give up the poiat ...
... Cause 254 : against it 125 ; majo . 129. The ministers wished to have the clause read a second te the same night , but after the bouse had been made to divide seven tzes in order to prevent it , they were compelled to give up the poiat ...
Page 154
... cause of offence , and thereby compel us to admit them to a share in it on the same principle , that should we attempt to exclude foreign vessels from the ports of the United Kingdom , foreign nations might compel us , by retaliating ...
... cause of offence , and thereby compel us to admit them to a share in it on the same principle , that should we attempt to exclude foreign vessels from the ports of the United Kingdom , foreign nations might compel us , by retaliating ...
Page 161
... cause , writs , pleadings , motions , arguments , interlocutory orders and final edgment . Without paying for this ... causes before whichever chamber they liked best . It proposed also to introduce trial by jury in civil causes , on the ...
... cause , writs , pleadings , motions , arguments , interlocutory orders and final edgment . Without paying for this ... causes before whichever chamber they liked best . It proposed also to introduce trial by jury in civil causes , on the ...
Page 165
... cause that had stirred up against him so many enemies . The present attack never would have been made but for the inquiries into abuses , in- stituted by the noble carl . Ilis me- ritorious exections to put an end to the most scandalous ...
... cause that had stirred up against him so many enemies . The present attack never would have been made but for the inquiries into abuses , in- stituted by the noble carl . Ilis me- ritorious exections to put an end to the most scandalous ...
Contents
90 | |
109 | |
136 | |
152 | |
172 | |
207 | |
464 | |
473 | |
813 | |
865 | |
927 | |
955 | |
962 | |
978 | |
989 | |
1001 | |
492 | |
503 | |
575 | |
656 | |
673 | |
682 | |
688 | |
697 | |
726 | |
728 | |
734 | |
742 | |
749 | |
756 | |
765 | |
771 | |
793 | |
1008 | |
1015 | |
1026 | |
1032 | |
1042 | |
1049 | |
1055 | |
1061 | |
1067 | |
1069 | |
1091 | |
1097 | |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
allies appeared appointed arms army August bank bart battle of Auerstadt bill Bonaparte Britain Britannic majesty British Calabria charge command conduct count Haugwitz court daugh daughter deceased declared defendant dispatch duke duty Earl of Lauderdale earl of Yarmouth electorate empire enemy engaged England English Europe excellency favour force France French government Hanover Henry Holkar honour impeachment Inclosure Ireland jesty John king lady land late lord Grenville lord Lauderdale lord Melville lordship majesty the emperor majesty's March ment minister Miss Naples navy negotiation neral o'clock object occasion Paris parliament party peace persons Petersburgh plenipotentiaries port possession present prince principle proposed public money received respect royal Russia sent ships Sicily signed sion tain taken Talleyrand Thomas tion took treaty troops Trotter undersigned uti possidetis vessels vice viscount wife William Yarmouth
Popular passages
Page 630 - Treaty signed this day. It shall be ratified, and the ratifications shall be exchanged at the same time. In witness whereof, the respective Plenipotentiaries have signed the same, and have affixed thereto their seals.
Page 651 - The rights of a neutral to carry on commercial intercourse with every part of the dominions of a belligerent permitted by the laws of the country (with the exception of blockaded ports and contraband of war) was believed to have been decided between Great Britain and the United States by the sentence of...
Page 398 - Secondly, the British fleet under my command could never have returned the second time to Egypt, had not Lady Hamilton's influence with the Queen of Naples caused letters to be wrote to the Governor of Syracuse, that he was to encourage the fleet being supplied with everything, should they put into any port in Sicily. We put into Syracuse, and received every supply ; went to Egypt, and destroyed the French fleet.
Page 687 - Stuart, and of the letter which your excellency did me the honour to write to me on the...
Page 386 - I beg leave to oiler you my most sincere thanks for the honour you have done me in drinking my health, and for the very flattering manner in which that honour has been conferred.
Page 630 - The present separate article shall have the same force and value as if it were inserted, word for word, in the treaty signed this day, and shall be ratified at the same time. In faith whereof we, the undersigned, by virtue of our respective full powers, have signed the present separate article, and affixed thereto the seals of our arms.
Page 355 - And the trial by rack is utterly unknown to the law of England; though once when the dukes of Exeter and Suffolk, and other ministers of Henry VI, had laid a design to introduce the civil law into this kingdom as the rule of government, for a beginning thereof they erected a rack for torture ; which was called in derision the duke of Exeter's daughter, and still remains in the tower of London; (0) where it was occasionally used as an engine of state, not of law, more than once ,in the reign of Queen...
Page 648 - Yet the same practices are renewed in the present war and are already of great amount. On the Mobile, our commerce passing through that river continues to be obstructed by arbitrary duties and vexatious searches. Propositions for adjusting amicably the boundaries of Louisiana have not been acceded to. While, however, the right is unsettled, we have avoided changing the state of things by taking new posts or strengthening ourselves in the disputed territories, in the hope that the other power would...
Page 627 - Majesty, for granting an Aid to His Majesty by a Land Tax to be raised in. Great Britain...
Page 834 - I have eat and drank, and conversed, and sat up all night, with Fox in England ; but it never has happened, perhaps it never can happen again, that I should enjoy him as I did that day, alone, from ten in the morning till ten at night.