History of the Thirty Years' Peace. A. D. 1816-1846, Volume 4G. Bell, 1878 - Great Britain |
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Page 2
... considered the murder of the individual culprit . Justice became more certain ; and with certainty in the administration of justice comes in- variably decrease of crime . Those who knew these things had arrived at advocating a total ...
... considered the murder of the individual culprit . Justice became more certain ; and with certainty in the administration of justice comes in- variably decrease of crime . Those who knew these things had arrived at advocating a total ...
Page 5
... considered to have fulfilled the purpose of their appoint- ment , and to be a national benefit too great to be fully appreciated but through lapse of time . The new com- mission of 1845 , which included the members of the former one ...
... considered to have fulfilled the purpose of their appoint- ment , and to be a national benefit too great to be fully appreciated but through lapse of time . The new com- mission of 1845 , which included the members of the former one ...
Page 19
... considered the matter , now saw how right it was that the aristocracy should pay their share towards a tax which had hitherto never touched them , while it bore hardly upon the poorest in the land who could read and write . The results ...
... considered the matter , now saw how right it was that the aristocracy should pay their share towards a tax which had hitherto never touched them , while it bore hardly upon the poorest in the land who could read and write . The results ...
Page 21
... considered by parliament and other branches of the government , they are not those which are most im- portant to the nation at large . It is all very well that the revenue should rise to what it was before , and that increase should be ...
... considered by parliament and other branches of the government , they are not those which are most im- portant to the nation at large . It is all very well that the revenue should rise to what it was before , and that increase should be ...
Page 23
... considered in law a separate publication of the libel . The Hansards were directed by the speaker to let matters take their course ; and they merely served Stockdale with a formal notice of the resolutions of the House of Commons of May ...
... considered in law a separate publication of the libel . The Hansards were directed by the speaker to let matters take their course ; and they merely served Stockdale with a formal notice of the resolutions of the House of Commons of May ...
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Popular passages
Page 196 - and other extraneous persons, entirely unconcerned in this adventure of his, to steal from him his small winnings, for a space of sixty years at the shortest. After sixty years, unless your honourable House provide otherwise, they may begin to steal. ' And your petitioner will ever pray. •THOMAS CAKLYLE.