Cobbett's Weekly Register, Volume 62William Cobbett J.M. Cobbett, 1827 |
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Halaman 69
... rally wish to know what is my wait for the consummation of opinion about who is to be Mi- things ; so willing to wait , pa- nister . It is impossible for me , * who never see any of the parties in : and C 2 69 % 70 APRIL 7 , 1827 .
... rally wish to know what is my wait for the consummation of opinion about who is to be Mi- things ; so willing to wait , pa- nister . It is impossible for me , * who never see any of the parties in : and C 2 69 % 70 APRIL 7 , 1827 .
Halaman 71
William Cobbett. who never see any of the parties in : and , I know that men must I have never heard of any one of them who was quite so foolish as to prefer rags and a bit of dry lieve that every other person bread and naked feet cut by ...
William Cobbett. who never see any of the parties in : and , I know that men must I have never heard of any one of them who was quite so foolish as to prefer rags and a bit of dry lieve that every other person bread and naked feet cut by ...
Halaman 79
... parties ; but , I have never yet and hear the player - folks ; but , heard of one single public man , when the affairs of a nation are who was a great favourite with to be managed , who yet ever the newspapers , that was confided ...
... parties ; but , I have never yet and hear the player - folks ; but , heard of one single public man , when the affairs of a nation are who was a great favourite with to be managed , who yet ever the newspapers , that was confided ...
Halaman 169
... parties having for them , some- and that will suggest to us to ask times victory and sometimes de- further , what must have been the feat ; but the latter generally fell judgment of him who undertook , to the lot of the allies , of ...
... parties having for them , some- and that will suggest to us to ask times victory and sometimes de- further , what must have been the feat ; but the latter generally fell judgment of him who undertook , to the lot of the allies , of ...
Halaman 197
... parties are upon " our duty ; it is our interest also ; a footing . The change , there- " but , it is our bounden duty to fore , is , in this point of view , of " uphold the King against any no interest at all . CANNING Will ...
... parties are upon " our duty ; it is our interest also ; a footing . The change , there- " but , it is our bounden duty to fore , is , in this point of view , of " uphold the King against any no interest at all . CANNING Will ...
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amendment April army Bank of England Barley Baronet Beans Beef borough Brougham bushel called Cambridgeshire cause cheers COBBETT conduct Corn Bill day's market Debt declared demand DUKE of YORK dull duty effect Electors farmers Flour friends Gentlemen gold Grain hear honourable house Horncastle House of Commons June King Lamb last week letter London Lord Lord John Russell Majesty Malt means measure Meeting ment Minister Monday Mutton Veal nation never Norwich Castle Oats opinion paper paper-money Parliament Pease petition petitioners Pork pounds dead present pretty Prices of CORN principles quantity quarter question Rapeseed Sheep shillings sinking offal Sir Francis Burdett Smithfield Smithfield Market sold sort speech SPITALFIELDS stone of 14 supply of Wheat taxes thing tion to-day toast trade vote week ended Westminster Wheat Whigs whole WILLIAM COBBETT wish
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Halaman 771 - To the Right Honourable the Lords Spiritual and Temporal of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland m Parliament assembled.
Halaman 487 - That no person who has an office or place of profit under the King, or receives a pension from the Crown, shall be capable of serving as a Member of the House of Commons.
Halaman 149 - IN a land of liberty it is extremely dangerous to make a distinct order of the profession of arms. In absolute monarchies this is necessary for the safety of the prince, and arises from the main principle of their constitution, which is that of governing by fear : but in free states the profession of a soldier, taken singly and merely as a profession, is justly an object of jealousy.
Halaman 307 - And, finally, to shorten the duration of parliaments ; and by removing the causes of that confusion, litigation and expense, with which they are at this day conducted, to render frequent and new elections what our ancestors at the Revolution asserted them to be, the means of a happy union and good agreement between the king and people. And your petitioners shall ever pray.
Halaman 293 - ... honourable House is elected by less than fifteen thousand electors, which, even if the male adults in the kingdom be estimated at so low a number as three millions, is not more than the two hundredth part of the people to be represented.
Halaman 295 - Your honourable house,' said the petitioners of 1793, 'is but too well acquainted with the tedious, intricate, and expensive scenes of litigation which have been brought before you, in attempting to settle the legal import of those numerous distinctions which perplex and confound the present rights of voting. How many months of your valuable time have been wasted in listening to the wrangling of lawyers upon the various species of burgagehold, leasehold, and freehold. How many committees have been...
Halaman 297 - ... unless his residence be in some borough where that right is vested in the inhabitants. This exception operates in sixty places, of which twenty-eight do not contain three hundred voters each, and the number of householders in England and Wales (exclusive of Scotland], who pay all taxes, is 714,911, and of householders who pay all taxes, but the house and window taxes, is 284,459, as appears by a return made to your honourable...
Halaman 149 - take up arms, but with a view " to defend his country and its " laws : he puts not off the citizen,
Halaman 305 - That it is a high infringement upon the liberties and privileges of the Commons of Great Britain, for any Lord of .Parliament, or any Lord- lieutenant of any county, to concern themselves in the elections of members to serve for the Commons in Parliament.
Halaman 359 - BUHDETT." (No. 3.) To SIR FRANCIS BUHDETT. " Gloucester Lodge, June 9, 1821. " SIR,— Lord William Bentinck has just delivered to me the answer, which you have transmitted to his lordship, through Mr Kinnaird, to the letter which I addressed to you on Thursday. " Lord William Bentinck's opinion (with which my own feelings entirely coincide) satisfies me that I can have no other reply to make to your letter, than to express my acknowlegment for the frankness and promptitude, with which you have disclaimed...