The History and Proceedings of the House of Commons from the Restoration to the Present Time ... Illustrated with a Great Variety of Historical and Explanatory Notes ... with a Large Appendix ...R. Chandler, 1742 |
Vsebina
1 | |
3 | |
5 | |
11 | |
13 | |
21 | |
22 | |
38 | |
158 | |
161 | |
193 | |
208 | |
219 | |
234 | |
240 | |
242 | |
43 | |
50 | |
79 | |
82 | |
83 | |
103 | |
126 | |
133 | |
134 | |
140 | |
153 | |
154 | |
245 | |
245 | |
250 | |
266 | |
304 | |
314 | |
353 | |
368 | |
369 | |
376 | |
393 | |
Druge izdaje - Prikaži vse
Pogosti izrazi in povedi
abfolutely Addrefs Affair Affiftance affure againſt Allies Anno Anſwer Army becauſe Bill Britain Britiſh Cafe Charge Commiffioners Committee Commons Confequence confider Confideration Country Crown Debate Defign defire Duty effectual Eftate eſtabliſhed Europe Expence faid fame fecond fecure fent feveral fhall fhew fhould fince firft firſt fome foon fuch fufficient fupport fure Gentlemen greateſt Happineſs Henry Pelham himſelf Honour Houfe Houſe Intereft juft Juftice King Kingdom laft laid Land-Tax laſt leaft leaſt Liberties Lord Hervey Lords Majefty Majefty's Meaſures moft Money moſt Motion muft muſt Nation neceffary Neceffity Number obliged Occafion order'd ourſelves Parliament Perfons pleaſed poffible prefent preferving propofed Publick Pulteney Purpoſe Queſtion raifing raiſed Reaſon Refolution Salt Seffion ſhall Sir Robert Walpole Sir William Wyndham ſpoke ſuch Sugar-Colonies thefe themſelves theſe Thing thofe thoſe tion Trade Treaty Treaty of Hanover Treaty of Seville Troops uſe Walpole William Pulteney
Priljubljeni odlomki
Stran 119 - And if an officer were sent into the court of requests, accompanied by a body of musketeers with screwed bayonets, and with orders to tell us what we ought to do, and how we were to vote, I know what would be the duty of this house...
Stran 352 - The Lord Mayor, Aldermen, and Common Council, Of the City of London...
Stran 118 - I believe they would not join in any such measures. But their lives are uncertain, nor can we be sure how long they may be continued in command; they may be all dismissed in a moment, and proper tools of power put in their room.
Stran 119 - Nor does the legality or illegality of that parliament, or of that army, alter the case ; for, with respect to that army, and according to their way of thinking, the parliament dismissed by them was a legal parliament ; they were an army raised and maintained according to law, and at first they were raised, as they imagined, for the preservation of those liberties which they afterwards...
Stran 120 - ... wherein will it differ from the standing armies of those countries which have already submitted their necks to the yoke ? We are now come to the Rubicon ; our army is now to be reduced, or it never will.
Stran 119 - Sir, I talk not of imaginary things. I talk of what has happened to an English House of Commons and from an English army; and not only from an English army, but an army that was raised by that very House of Commons, an army that was paid by them, and an army that was commanded by generals appointed by them.
Stran 88 - ... it in his head to carry the ship a great way about, through sands, rocks, and shallows ; who, after having- lost a great number of seamen, destroyed a great deal of tackle and rigging, and subjected the owners to an enormous expense, at last by chance hits the port, and triumphs in his good conduct.
Stran 119 - ... that was raised by that very house of Commons , an army that was paid by them, and an army that was commanded by generals appointed by them. Therefore do not let us vainly imagine, that an army raised and maintained by authority of Parliament , will always be...
Stran 297 - House should on that day week resolve itself into a committee ' to consider of the most proper methods for the better security and improvement of the duties and revenues already charged upon and payable from tobacco and wines.
Stran 120 - Was not every one of them named by the army, without any regard to hereditary right or to any right? A...