| Robert Christie - 1848 - 386 pages
...attached to the empire, for the sake of creating a harmony and uniformity in the several parts of the empire ; unattainable, and, as I think, useless if...of keeping up the historical idea of the origin of their laws : — not the necessity of gratifying the unprincipled and impracticable expectations of... | |
| Robert Christie - 1866 - 386 pages
...attached to the empire, for the sake of creating a harmony and uniformity in the several parts of the empire ; unattainable, and, as I think, useless if...of keeping up the historical idea of the origin of their laws : — not the necessity of gratifying the unprincipled and impracticable expectations of... | |
| William Kingsford - 1892 - 538 pages
...attached to the empire, for the sake of creating a harmony and uniformity in the several parts of the empire ; unattainable, and, as I think, useless if...the Parliament of Paris, for fear of keeping up the histoiical idea of the origin of their laws : — not the necessity of gratifying the unprincipled... | |
| Public Archives of Canada - 1907 - 768 pages
...attached to the empire, for the sake of creating a harmony and uniformity in the several parts of the empire ; unattainable, and, as I think, useless if...of keeping up the historical idea of the origin of their laws : — not the necessity of gratifying the unprincipled and impracticable expectations of... | |
| Public Archives of Canada - 1907 - 780 pages
...attached to the empire, for the sake of creating a harmony and uniformity in the several parts of the empire ; unattainable, and, as I think, useless if...of keeping up the historical idea of the origin of their laws : — not the necessity of gratifying the unprincipled and impracticable expectations of... | |
| Public Archives Canada - 1907 - 762 pages
...attached to the empire, for the sake of creating a harmony and uniformity in the several parts of the empire ; unattainable, and, as I think, useless if...of keeping up the historical idea of the origin of their laws : — not the necessity of gratifying the unprincipled and impracticable expectations of... | |
| A. L. Burt, Burt - 1968 - 294 pages
...the sake of creating a harmony and uniformity," which he said was either unattainable or useless; nor "the necessity of stripping from a lawyer's argument...of keeping up the historical idea of the origin of their laws"; nor "the necessity of gratifying the unprincipled and impracticable expectations of those... | |
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