The Letters of JuliusW. Sams, 1821 - 188 من الصفحات |
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الصفحة xlv
... France at our Court . LETTER XXII . To the Electors of Westminster , on the coalition and claims of Sir F. Burdett and John Cam Hobhouse .-- How far these Gentlemen are likely to be serviceable and SITTING Repre sentatives 152 165 23 ...
... France at our Court . LETTER XXII . To the Electors of Westminster , on the coalition and claims of Sir F. Burdett and John Cam Hobhouse .-- How far these Gentlemen are likely to be serviceable and SITTING Repre sentatives 152 165 23 ...
الصفحة 37
... France , we never can be undone . It is a disgrace to a man , who has enjoyed the advantages of English education , to be unable to appreciate the foregoing axiom . The talent of England has rallied in beautiful and august array around ...
... France , we never can be undone . It is a disgrace to a man , who has enjoyed the advantages of English education , to be unable to appreciate the foregoing axiom . The talent of England has rallied in beautiful and august array around ...
الصفحة 38
... France is cursed even now with five or six prominent factions recruiting their exhausted powers for future struggles . The wrongs these parties have done one another have sown interminable hatred between them . The interests they ...
... France is cursed even now with five or six prominent factions recruiting their exhausted powers for future struggles . The wrongs these parties have done one another have sown interminable hatred between them . The interests they ...
الصفحة 39
... France , worried by factions that have done away all her ancient bonds of union - Jacobins battling in her Parliament for the admission of Regicides , while the supporters of Legitimacy are com- pelled to resort to quinquennial renewals ...
... France , worried by factions that have done away all her ancient bonds of union - Jacobins battling in her Parliament for the admission of Regicides , while the supporters of Legitimacy are com- pelled to resort to quinquennial renewals ...
الصفحة 42
... France on the eve of her age of blood , in the very nature of things we cannot be moved ; and never can it become endemic here till the same causes be in opera- tion as propagated it in France ; till genius and wealth , in horrid ...
... France on the eve of her age of blood , in the very nature of things we cannot be moved ; and never can it become endemic here till the same causes be in opera- tion as propagated it in France ; till genius and wealth , in horrid ...
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abuse accusation adultery amongst assassination assure attempt authority bill blasphemous blood cause character charge City of Westminster civil Cobbett common sense conceive conduct Constitution conviction Courier crime criminal Crown dare declaration defence degenerate Whigs degradation dignity disaffection Doctor Watson Duke de Berri Editor effects Electors England equally evil fact faction falsehood favour fear feeling France gentlemen give grand jury guilty honour House hustings innocence Jacobin John Cam Hobhouse JULIUS justice King Lambton late LETTER liament libels liberty Lord Lord Castlereagh Lord John Russell loyal Madam Magistrates Majesty ment misprision of treason Nation never Newgate opinion opposition outrage Parlia Parliament party political prejudge present proof prove purpose Queen rabble racter Radical Regicides render retributive justice sedition shew Sir F Sir Francis Burdett sophisms Sovereign suffer Suffrage supposed thing Times-serving tion traitors treason trial truth verdict Westminster wish Wooler worthy wretched
مقاطع مشهورة
الصفحة 118 - Separating the duty of a patriot from that of an advocate, he must go on, reckless of consequences, though it should be his unhappy fate to involve his country in confusion.
الصفحة 130 - On the tenth day of April, the duke of Devonshire represented, in the house of lords, that triennial elections served to keep up party divisions; .to raise and foment feuds in private families ; to produce ruinous expenses, and give occasion to the cabals and intrigues of foreign princes ; that it became the wisdom of such an august assembly, to apply proper remedies to an evil that might be attended with the most dangerous consequences, especially in the present temper of the nation, as the spirit...
الصفحة 86 - Justice would be to calumniate that sacred name ; and for me to suppress an expression of my opinion on the subject, would be tacitly to lend myself to my own destruction, as well as to an imposition upon the nation and the world. In the House of Commons I can discover no better grounds of security.
الصفحة 180 - Middlesex, baronet, being a seditious, malicious, and ill-disposed person, and unlawfully and maliciously devising and intending to raise and excite discontent, disaffection, and sedition among the liege subjects of our lord the present king, and amongst the soldiers of our said lord the king, and to move and excite the liege subjects of our said lord the king...
الصفحة 85 - ... revilers, and traitors had not abounded. Your Court became much less a scene of polished manners and refined intercourse than of low intrigue and scurrility.
الصفحة 16 - Commons had pronounced the measure " disappointing to the hopes of parliament, derogatory to the dignity of the crown, and injurious to the best interests of the empire...
الصفحة 120 - My lords, I call upon you to pause. You stand on the brink of a precipice. You may go on in your precipitate career — you may pronounce against your Queen, but it will be the last judgment you ever will pronounce.
الصفحة 8 - The sending down of the green bag is equivalent to the finding of a true bill by a grand jury. The...
الصفحة 121 - Queen, but it will he the last judgment you will ever pronounce. Her persecutors will fail in their object, and the ruin with which they seek to cover the Queen, will return to overwhelm themselves. Save the country, my Lords, from the horrors that await it— save yourselves from impending...