A history of the political life of the rt. hon. W. Pitt, by John Gifford, 第 2 巻 |
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... attended this bed of justice , received special orders to remain at Versailles , and to be present at the first ... attend , from passive obedience to the orders of their sovereign ; and that their presence must not be considered as any ...
... attended this bed of justice , received special orders to remain at Versailles , and to be present at the first ... attend , from passive obedience to the orders of their sovereign ; and that their presence must not be considered as any ...
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... attended the King during his illness , were examined , in order to ascertain whether his Majesty was incapable of meeting his Parlia- ment , and of attending to any sort of public business ; what was the probable duration of his malady ...
... attended the King during his illness , were examined , in order to ascertain whether his Majesty was incapable of meeting his Parlia- ment , and of attending to any sort of public business ; what was the probable duration of his malady ...
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John Richards Green. incapacity to attend to business did not admit of a doubt ; but the physicians could assign no probable duration to the disorder ; though they considered a cure as highly probable . These proceedings were reported to ...
John Richards Green. incapacity to attend to business did not admit of a doubt ; but the physicians could assign no probable duration to the disorder ; though they considered a cure as highly probable . These proceedings were reported to ...
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... attending to public busi- ness , and that the personal exercise of the royal authority is thereby , for the present , inter- rupted . Second . " That it is the opinion of this committee , that it is the right and duty of the Lords ...
... attending to public busi- ness , and that the personal exercise of the royal authority is thereby , for the present , inter- rupted . Second . " That it is the opinion of this committee , that it is the right and duty of the Lords ...
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... attended with an insurmountable absurdity . If the majority of the convention could not grant a legal sanction to the establishment they had made , they could never invest the Prince of Orange with a just right to ascend the throne ...
... attended with an insurmountable absurdity . If the majority of the convention could not grant a legal sanction to the establishment they had made , they could never invest the Prince of Orange with a just right to ascend the throne ...
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adopted appointed argument asserted Bart Bertrand's Annals bill British Burke called church circumstances clergy committee conduct consequence considered constitution council court Crown danger debate declared decrees deputies discussion dissenters Duke of Orleans duty established executive government exercise existed expressed favour France French heir heir apparent honour House of Lords Houses of Parliament impeachments incapacity John justice King King's kingdom legislature liament liberty Lord Lord North Majesty Majesty's measures ment ministers Mirabeau monarchy motion National Assembly necessary necessity Neckar nobility object observed occasion officers opinion Paris Parlia person Pitt political precedent prerogatives present Previous Question Prince of Orange Prince of Wales principles proceedings proposed prorogation regent reign rendered representatives resolution respect royal assent royal authority Royal Family Royal Highness sion Sovereign speech States-General third estate throne tion Versailles voted whole
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119 ページ - ... The prince. however,. holding as he does, that it is an undoubted and fundamental principle of this constitution, that the powers and prerogatives of the crown are vested there, as a trust for the benefit of the people ; and that they are sacred...
434 ページ - ... be attempted, and that any friend of his could concur in such measures, (he was far, very far, from believing they could,) he would abandon his best friends, and join with his worst enemies to oppose either the means or the end...
121 ページ - Pitt, nor proper, to suggest to the prince the restraint he proposes against the prince's granting away the king's real and personal property. The prince does not conceive, that, during the king's life, he is, by law, entitled to make any such grant ; and he is sure, that he has never shown the smallest inclination to possess any such power.
117 ページ - ... disjoining government from its natural and accustomed support, a scheme for disconnecting the authority to command service, from the power of animating it by reward; and for allotting to the prince all the invidious duties of government, without the means of softening them to the public, by any one act of grace, favour, or benignity.
120 ページ - If attention to what is presumed might be his majesty's feelings and wishes on the happy day of his recovery be the object, it is with the truest sincerity the prince expresses his firm conviction, that no event would be more repugnant to the feelings of his royal father, than the knowledge that the government of his son and representative had exhibited the sovereign power of the realm in a state of degradation...
438 ページ - ... against their masters ; tradesmen against their customers ; artificers against their employers; tenants against their landlords: curates against their bishops; and children against their parents. That this cause of theirs was not an enemy to servitude, but to society. He wished the house to consider, how the members would like to have their mansions pulled down and pillaged, their persons abused, insulted, and destroyed; their title deeds brought out and burned before their faces...
72 ページ - Whereas the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and Commons assembled at Westminster, lawfully, fully and freely representing all the estates of the people of this realm...
440 ページ - What we did was in truth and substance, and in a constitutional light ; — a revolution not made, but prevented. We took solid securities : we settled doubtful questions: we corrected anomalies in our law. In the staple, fundamental parts of our constitution, we made no revolution ; no, nor any alteration at all.
113 ページ - Majesty; with provisions, nevertheless, that the care of his Majesty's royal person, and the management of his Majesty's household, and the direction and appointment of the officers and servants therein, should be in the Queen, under such regulations as may be thought necessary.
114 ページ - I beg leave to add, that their ideas are formed on the supposition that his Majesty's illness is only temporary, and may be of no long duration.