The Parliamentary Register: Or an Impartial Report of the Debates that Have Occured in the Two Houses of Parliament, Volumen3

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Página 16 - the same fate; and there is not an inhabitant of the country, of any class or description, who has had any dealing or communication with the French army, who has not had reason to repent of
Página 79 - that the promissory notes of the Bank of England have hitherto been and are at this time held to be equivalent to the legal coin of the realm, in
Página 707 - himself of a more penetrating genius, swore that he could frame a conception of a Lord Mayor not only without his horse, gown, and gold chain, but even without
Página 16 - ought to place on such promises and assurances, and that there is no security for life, or for any thing which renders life valuable, excepting in decided resistance to the enemy.
Página 860 - GENTLEMEN, His royal highness the Prince Regent, acting in the name and on die behalf of his Majesty,
Página 363 - in any danger ; but if it is, I am sure that we are in a wrong way to secure it. If our laws will battle against Providence, there can be. no doubt -of the issue of the conflict between the ordinances of God and the decrees of Man : transient must
Página 585 - he thought it the best way to move for an Address to the Prince Regent, which he did to the following effect :— " That an humble Address be presented to the Prince Regent, praying, that he would
Página 361 - may take it—a Deist, an Atheist may likewise take it. The Catholics are alone excepted, and for what reason ? Certainly not because the internal character of the Catholic religion is inherently vicious—not because it necessarily incapacitates those who profess it to make laws for "their fellow-citizens. If a Deist be fit to sit in Parliament, it can hardly
Página 256 - on hats and gloves were given up as impracticable and unproductive, he trusted the intelligence would not be thrown away upon those gentlemen, who, in their anxiety to assist the Chancellor of the Exchequer in discovering new objects of taxation, honoured him with their communications. He could assure
Página 326 - since he trusted there could be found persons enough who held offices of large emolument but no great employment, whose leisure would amply allow of their undertaking the duty in question." This romantic system of the gratuitous government of India by the sinecure men, lasted till 1793, when Lord

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