History of Europe: From the Fall of Napoleon, in 1815, to the Accession of Louis Napoleon, in 1852, Volume 4W. Blackwood and sons, 1855 - Europe |
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Page xiv
... called to the crown , ib . 429 430 431 ib . 432 433 434 435 ib . 436 • 14. Project of giving the lieutenancy - general to the Duke of Orléans , and the crown to the Duke of Bordeaux , 437 15. First placards in the Orléans interest , 438 ...
... called to the crown , ib . 429 430 431 ib . 432 433 434 435 ib . 436 • 14. Project of giving the lieutenancy - general to the Duke of Orléans , and the crown to the Duke of Bordeaux , 437 15. First placards in the Orléans interest , 438 ...
Page 1
... called houses , and they ought not to be ; they are called cabins : they are built of mud , and covered partly with thatch , and partly with a surface which they call scraws , but which is utterly insufficient to keep out the rain . In ...
... called houses , and they ought not to be ; they are called cabins : they are built of mud , and covered partly with thatch , and partly with a surface which they call scraws , but which is utterly insufficient to keep out the rain . In ...
Page 19
... called for by justice and equity , has utterly failed , on the admission of its warmest advocates , in removing one real grievance of Ireland , while it has introduced many to which the country had hitherto been a stranger . The ...
... called for by justice and equity , has utterly failed , on the admission of its warmest advocates , in removing one real grievance of Ireland , while it has introduced many to which the country had hitherto been a stranger . The ...
Page 22
... called for by necessity that it met with very little opposition in Parliament , and passed , almost unnoticed , into a law . It Renewal of never failed , for a time , to apply a rude but effective rection Act , remedy to the disorders ...
... called for by necessity that it met with very little opposition in Parliament , and passed , almost unnoticed , into a law . It Renewal of never failed , for a time , to apply a rude but effective rection Act , remedy to the disorders ...
Page 28
... called upon to take the redressing of their grievances into their own hands . But experience has now abundantly proved that the means they took to XX . 1824 . effect that redress were the ones 28 HISTORY OF EUROPE . Roman Catholic ...
... called upon to take the redressing of their grievances into their own hands . But experience has now abundantly proved that the means they took to XX . 1824 . effect that redress were the ones 28 HISTORY OF EUROPE . Roman Catholic ...
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Common terms and phrases
agitation Bank Bank of England Britain British Brougham brought Cabinet carried Catholic Association Catholic emancipation cause Chancellor CHAP character Church circulation classes consequence constitution Corn Corn Laws currency debate disfranchise distress Duke of Wellington duty Earl effect election England English entirely evil excited existing favour feelings Government House of Commons House of Lords House of Peers Huskisson increase industry influence interests Ireland Irish King leaders legislature liberal Lord Eldon Lord Goderich Lord John Russell Majesty majority manufactures Martineau measure ment Ministers nation necessity never numbers O'Connell object occasion opinion opposition Parl Parliament parliamentary party passed Peel persons political principles produced proposed question reduction Reform Bill Relief Bill repeal Revolution Roebuck Roman Catholics Sir Francis Burdett small notes Sovereign speech suffering throne tineau tion Tory towns vote Whigs whole XXII XXIII
Popular passages
Page 228 - Ye friends to truth, ye statesmen who survey The rich man's joys increase, the poor's decay, 'Tis yours to judge how wide the limits stand Between a splendid and a happy land.
Page 87 - I dread it, indeed — but upon far other grounds: I dread it from an apprehension of the tremendous consequences which might arise from any hostilities in which we might now be engaged. Some years ago, in the discussion of the negotiations respecting the French war against Spain, I took the liberty of adverting to this topic.
Page 306 - Parliament in 1265 two knights from each county, two citizens from each city, and two burgesses from each borough. To...
Page 527 - CXVII, inclusive, of the General Act of the Congress of Vienna, relative to the Free Navigation of navigable Rivers, shall be applied to those navigable Rivers which separate the Belgian and the Dutch territories, or which traverse them both.
Page 376 - The King grants permission to Earl Grey, and to his Chancellor, Lord Brougham, to create such a number of peers as will be sufficient to ensure the passing of the Reform Bill, first calling peers' eldest sons. — Signed, WILLIAM R., Windsor, May 17, 1832.
Page 88 - ... source of confidence and security; but in the situation in which this country stands, our business is not to seek opportunities of displaying it, but to content ourselves with letting the professors of violent and exaggerated doctrines on both sides feel, that it is not their interest to convert an umpire into an adversary. The situation of England, amidst the struggle of political opinions which agitates more or less sensibly different countries of the world, may be compared to that of the Ruler...
Page 158 - Constitution; which keeps alive discord and ill-will amongst His Majesty's Subjects; and which must, if permitted to continue, effectually obstruct every effort, permanently to improve the condition of Ireland. His Majesty confidently relies on the wisdom and on the support of His Parliament ; and His Majesty feels assured, that you will commit...
Page 266 - Statesgeneral should have led to no satisfactory result. I am endeavouring, in concert with my Allies, to devise such means of restoring tranquillity as may be compatible with the welfare and good government of the Netherlands, and with the future security of other states.
Page 128 - ... Notwithstanding the valour displayed by the combined fleet, His Majesty deeply laments that this conflict should have occurred with the naval force of an ancient ally ; but he still entertains a confident hope that this untoward event will not be followed by further hostilities, and will not impede that amicable adjustment of the existing differences between the Porte and the Greeks, to which it is so manifestly their common interest to accede.
Page 333 - Yes, sir," said the Chancellor, 'I do know it; and nothing but my thorough knowledge of your Majesty's goodness, of your paternal anxiety for the good of your people, and my own solemn belief that the safety of the state depends upon this day's proceedings, could have emboldened me to the performance of so unusual, and, in ordinary circumstances, so improper a proceeding. In all humility...