The Parliamentary Register: Or, History of the Proceedings and Debates of the House of Commons [and of the House of Lords] Containing an Account of the Interesting Speeches and Motions ... During the 1st Session of the 14th [-18th] Parliament of Great BritainJ. Almon, 1785 - Great Britain |
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Page 5
... These several points which he had ftated were , he de- clared , the principal confiderations that weighed with him . as fit to be attended to in the next feffion , when the fubject fhould be brought fully under difcuffion , and when the ...
... These several points which he had ftated were , he de- clared , the principal confiderations that weighed with him . as fit to be attended to in the next feffion , when the fubject fhould be brought fully under difcuffion , and when the ...
Page 36
... these most im- portant pofts , that reinforcements might arrive to repel the enemy before any effential mischief was done . The advantages to the navy arifing from the propofed forti- fications would be extremely great and important ...
... these most im- portant pofts , that reinforcements might arrive to repel the enemy before any effential mischief was done . The advantages to the navy arifing from the propofed forti- fications would be extremely great and important ...
Page 41
... these methods , he , was aware , were liable to objection ; but of the two , he thought the laft was preferable . What he had ftated , he faid , was the whole of what had suggested itself to him as neceffary to be done in addition to ...
... these methods , he , was aware , were liable to objection ; but of the two , he thought the laft was preferable . What he had ftated , he faid , was the whole of what had suggested itself to him as neceffary to be done in addition to ...
Page 47
... these boroughs petitioned Parliament to be restored to the exercise of their ancient fran- chife ; their prayer was granted ; and to this day they con- tinued to enjoy it . But the other thirty - fix not having pre- fented any petition ...
... these boroughs petitioned Parliament to be restored to the exercise of their ancient fran- chife ; their prayer was granted ; and to this day they con- tinued to enjoy it . But the other thirty - fix not having pre- fented any petition ...
Page 50
... these circumftances , he thought that a doubt could not be left on the mind , but that it always had been the principle of reprefentation that it should change with the changes which the country might endure , and that it fhould not be ...
... these circumftances , he thought that a doubt could not be left on the mind , but that it always had been the principle of reprefentation that it should change with the changes which the country might endure , and that it fhould not be ...
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Common terms and phrases
againſt alfo amendment anſwer April argument becauſe bill Britain British bufinefs cafe cellor Pitt Chancellor Pitt circumftances Commiffioners Committee confequence confideration confidered conftitution debt declared defired Ditto duty effential England eſtabliſhment eſtimate Exchequer excife exift expence faid fame fecurity feffion fent fervants feveral fhall fhips fhould filk fince firft firſt fituation fome fpeech ftated ftill fubject fuch fuffered fufficient fuppofed fupport fure furplus fyftem High Bailiff himſelf Houfe Houſe impofed increaſe inftance intereft Ireland Irish kingdom laft lefs Lord North Lord Stormont Lordship manufacturers meaſure ment Minifter moft moſt motion muft muſt neceffary neceffity noble Lord obferved object occafion opinion oppofition paffed Parliament Parliament of Ireland perfons petition poffible prefent produce propofed propofitions purpoſe quarter queftion reafon refolutions refpect revenue right ho right honourable gentleman rofe ſaid ſtate thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe thought tion trade trufted uſed wifhed
Popular passages
Page 194 - That an humble addrefs be prefented to His Majefty, " that he will be gracioufly pleafed to give directions that " there be laid before this Houfe, copies of information re«.
Page 607 - But their victim was not of the passive kind. . They were soon obliged to conclude a treaty of peace and close alliance with this rebel, at the gates of Madras.
Page 613 - That debt forms the foul putrid mucus, in which are engendered the whole brood of creeping ascarides, all the endless involutions, the eternal knot, added to a knot of those inexpugnable tape-worms which devour the nutriment, and eat up the bowels of India...
Page 593 - ... credit, (contrary to every idea of the known settled policy of England,) are on the point of being converted into a mystery of state. You are going to have one half of the globe hid even from the common liberal curiosity of an English gentleman. Here a grand revolution commences. Mark the period, and mark the circumstances.
Page 228 - Majefty, the fum fum of 1,250,000!. be raifed, by loans or exchequer bills, to be charged upon the firft aids to be granted in the next feffion of...
Page 545 - Ireland, except those of the growth, produce, or manufacture of any of the countries beyond the Cape of Good Hope to the Straits of Magellan, should be imported into each kingdom from the other reciprocally under the same regulations, and at the same duties (if subject to duties) to which they would be...
Page 548 - Indies, or any manufacture made of such article, unless in cases where a similar bounty is payable in Great Britain on exportation from thence, or where such bounty is merely in the nature of a drawback, or compensation of or for duties paid over and above any duties paid thereon in...
Page 607 - Carnatic an everlasting monument of vengeance, and to put perpetual desolation as a barrier between him and those, against whom the faith which holds the moral elements of the world together, was no protection.
Page 51 - ... the rest. In this view of the business, he imagined, that the House would agree with him in thinking, that there were about thirty-six boroughs so decayed, as to come within the scheme of such an operation. Seventy-two would therefore be the number of members to be added to the counties, in such proportion as the wisdom of parliament might direct, and this number it was his intention to propose should be fixed and unalterable. The operation should be gradual, as he intended that the boroughs...
Page 547 - That in order to give permanency to the settlement now intended to be /established, it is necessary that no prohibition, or new or additional duties should be hereafter imposed in either kingdom on the importation of any article of the growth, product, or manufacture of the other, except such additional duties as may be requisite to balance duties on internal consumption, pursuant to the foregoing resolution.