The Parliamentary DebatesPublished under the superintendence of T.C. Hansard, 1822 - Great Britain |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 7
... attention of the House to the remain- ing 8d . per bushel , he should be supported by those gentlemen who gave their sup- port to the present motion . The notion seemed to have been circulated , that the English members would not be ...
... attention of the House to the remain- ing 8d . per bushel , he should be supported by those gentlemen who gave their sup- port to the present motion . The notion seemed to have been circulated , that the English members would not be ...
Page 9
... attention of the House to this duced to show the fallacy of this system ; most important fact ; and then let them for he could never oppose authority to judge of the expediency of such a measure demonstration . But , in the absence of ...
... attention of the House to this duced to show the fallacy of this system ; most important fact ; and then let them for he could never oppose authority to judge of the expediency of such a measure demonstration . But , in the absence of ...
Page 15
... attention portion to the quality of the land ; it to this subject was again employed in its might be 31. per acre on poor , and 51. on consideration . But , another obvious source rich land . It was time , then , for ministers of relief ...
... attention portion to the quality of the land ; it to this subject was again employed in its might be 31. per acre on poor , and 51. on consideration . But , another obvious source rich land . It was time , then , for ministers of relief ...
Page 23
... attention of the House . The first was this - Was the country in such a situation with regard to the public creditor , its revenue , its expen- diture , as justified it in remitting any particular tax ? The next was - Suppos- ing the ...
... attention of the House . The first was this - Was the country in such a situation with regard to the public creditor , its revenue , its expen- diture , as justified it in remitting any particular tax ? The next was - Suppos- ing the ...
Page 31
... attention , he should have still more in justifying , when he met his constituents , a silent vote upon the subject in debate . The noble lord then went on to answer the argu- ments employed against the bill . He wished to know from the ...
... attention , he should have still more in justifying , when he met his constituents , a silent vote upon the subject in debate . The noble lord then went on to answer the argu- ments employed against the bill . He wished to know from the ...
Contents
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973 | |
1001 | |
1011 | |
1015 | |
1029 | |
1039 | |
1043 | |
479 | |
495 | |
501 | |
507 | |
557 | |
571 | |
589 | |
601 | |
651 | |
717 | |
845 | |
857 | |
893 | |
1065 | |
1067 | |
1099 | |
1389 | |
1447 | |
1461 | |
1463 | |
1517 | |
xxxvii | |
xlix | |
lxiii | |
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Common terms and phrases
admitted amendment amount attention Bank Bank of England baronet Bennet bill borough called chancellor charge church circumstances clerks committee conduct consideration considered constitution contended court crime Crown declared duty earl effect election England establishment estimates exchequer existed expense fact favour feelings forgery Grampound granted honour House of Commons Hume increase individual inquiry interest Ireland John Bull jury justice labour learned friend learned gentleman liberty Lord Palmerston lordships magistrates majesty's Manchester Marquis of Londonderry measure meeting ment military ministers motion never noble lord Norway oath oath of supremacy object observed occasion offence opinion Ordnance parliament parties passed persons petition present principle privileges proposed prosecute Protestant punishment Queenborough question racter reduced reform repeal respect Roman Catholic salary Scotland sinking fund sion taken thing thought tion vote whole wished yeomanry