The Parliamentary Debates, Volume 16Published under the superintendence of T.C. Hansard, 1827 - Great Britain |
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Results 1-5 of 99
Page 9
... honour you have conferred upon me.ment , respecting the termination of the I know well how to estimate that honour , war in the Burmese territories , have been and I will struggle to deserve it . The fulfilled , and that a peace has ...
... honour you have conferred upon me.ment , respecting the termination of the I know well how to estimate that honour , war in the Burmese territories , have been and I will struggle to deserve it . The fulfilled , and that a peace has ...
Page 15
... honour to se- cond the motion of the noble earl . Lord King rose to assure their lordships , that he had no objection either to the Ad- dress proposed by the noble earl , or to the Speech which his Majesty had delivered བ་ མས་ ནན that ...
... honour to se- cond the motion of the noble earl . Lord King rose to assure their lordships , that he had no objection either to the Ad- dress proposed by the noble earl , or to the Speech which his Majesty had delivered བ་ མས་ ནན that ...
Page 31
... honour - sistent with those rights and liberties , they ed by the confidence of the great county mutually supported each other . Among which had sent him there , he would the topics of congratulation afforded by adhere to the same rule ...
... honour - sistent with those rights and liberties , they ed by the confidence of the great county mutually supported each other . Among which had sent him there , he would the topics of congratulation afforded by adhere to the same rule ...
Page 33
... honour invio- fleets not being under proper control , and late . The other instance to which he al- the necessity of protecting the interests luded was the recognition of the indepen- and property of British subjects , would dence of ...
... honour invio- fleets not being under proper control , and late . The other instance to which he al- the necessity of protecting the interests luded was the recognition of the indepen- and property of British subjects , would dence of ...
Page 49
... honour- ́able , aid ; and it is only with such qualifi- cations , and under such restrictions , that his Majesty's government ask the support any man who now sits in this House for the first time . of Mr. Brougham , in explanation ...
... honour- ́able , aid ; and it is only with such qualifi- cations , and under such restrictions , that his Majesty's government ask the support any man who now sits in this House for the first time . of Mr. Brougham , in explanation ...
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Common terms and phrases
admitted adopted alderman alluded appointed Arigna army attention baronet believed bill called Catholic emancipation Chancery church clergy colonel commission committee conduct consideration considered corn Corn-laws course court court of Chancery declared distress duke duty earl effect election emigration England evil existed expense favour feel felt foreign give grant honour hoped House of Commons House of Lords important individual inquiry interest Ireland justice labour land learned friend learned gentleman lord Chancellor lord George Beresford lordships Majesty majesty's majesty's government means measure ment ministers motion necessary never noble lord oath object observed occasion officers opinion parliament parties persons petition petitioners Portugal present principle private bills proceedings proposed proposition Protestant question referred religion resolution respect right hon Roman Catholics royal highness Secretary sion Spain speech thing thought tion treaty vote wished