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who were beginning to revive the old Roman system of municipal self-government, and to re-awaken the spirit of commercial energy and enterprise. First framed in those troubled times, and for that scanty and ill-assorted population, our Constitution has expanded with the expanse of civilization, numbers, and power; and while it has preserved all its integral parts and all its primary attributes, it has become the Government of and for us, the eighteen millions of this mighty English nation, whose language, laws, arts, arms, and institutions are overspreading every region of the world. On the blessings of that Government, on the security and order which it guarantees, and on the independent energy and freedom which it sanctions and inspires, it is surely needless to dwell further in addressing the men of 1848, who have witnessed the misery and degradation which anarchical violence and despotic coercion have caused in other lands. Our Constitution must from time to time require remedial changes; and at present the anomalies of the distribution of the suffrage, and the shameful corruption with which its exercise is too often accompanied, are pressing on our statesmen's anxious attention. He who has studied our Constitution the most deeply, will venerate it the most; and, while he vigorously extirpates abuses, and steadily works out its vital law of growth and development, he will religiously guard its primary institutions from the experiments of the conceited theorist and the assaults of the disloyal destroyer.

INDEX.

Act of Settlement, 330.
Aids, 102, 134.

Anglo-Saxon, chief element of Eng-
lish, 15; meaning of word, 17;
original homes of Anglo-Saxons,
ib.; their primitive institutions
and character, 18; land in Bri-
tain, 21; how far were their con-
quests wars of extermination,
28-31; their conversion, its civi-
lizing effects, 33; Anglo-Saxon in-
stitutions as matured in England,
42-52.

Appeal of felony, what, 158.
Appropriation of supplies, 329.
Aristotle's classification of political
functions, 7. 351.

Arms, right of the subject to, 313,
and note.

Army, standing, in time of peace,
without consent of parliament,
illegal, 295. 320.

Arnold, Dr., on jury trials as an in-

strument of national education, 230.
Articuli super cartas, 231.
Attainder, 144, note; bills of, 252;
writ of, 305, note.

Bail, 147, note; excessive, not to be
required, 320.
Barons of England-force King John
to grant the Great Charter, 120;
headed a national movement and
sought national objects, 124; Lord
Chatham s eulogium on, 150;
meaning of term "Baron," 185.
Bicameral system, 198.

Bill of Rights-its constitutional im-
portance, 4; text of, and notes,
317-326.

Boroughs, Saxon, 50; oppressions of,
after Norman Conquest, 105. 193;
first represented in Henry III.'s
reign, 194; electors, who, 256.
268; early borough system, 268;
changes and abuses, 269; rotten
boroughs, 342; present state of
municipal self-government, 350.
Britons, ancient. See "Celts."
Bushell's case, 305.

Cabinet, 332-364.

Campbell's (Lord) Libel Act, its con-
stitutional value, 394.

Celts-British Celts, their character,
&c., 24; how far Romanized, 25;
how far did the Saxons extirpate
or blend with them, 28-31.
Centralization-Distinction between,
in matters of imperial or general
state interest, and in matters of
local interest, 372 and note;
value of the first, 209. 372; per-
nicious effects of the second, 374-
378; and see note at 378.
Ceorls, their social and political posi-
tion in Saxon England, 43. 46. 49.
Chancellor, Lord, 366. 383.
Chancellor of the Exchequer, 366.
Charles I., disputes between, and his
three first parliaments, 280-295;
sincere in unconstitutional opinions
respecting his prerogative, 280;
grants the Petition of Right, 291.

Charles II.-Important constitutional | County Court, in Saxon times, 47;

statutes during his reign, 301-304.
Charters of early Anglo-Norman
kings, 107; of Henry I., 117.
See "Magna Carta."
Chatham, Lord, his Bible of the
English Constitution, 5; his eu-
logium on the barons who gained
the Great Charter, 150.
Church, civilizing influence of, in
early times, 33, 34. 53.
Commons, House of, origin, 187;
knights of the shire, 187-192;
how elected, 192. 253. 272;
qualification for, 248, 260; bo-
rough members, when first intro-
duced, 194; coalesce with knights
of the shire in one House, 199;
gradual increase of power of House
of Commons in fourteenth and
fifteenth centuries, 235-246. 262;
House of Commons the preponde-
rant branch of the Legislature after
Charles II.'s restoration, 300;
position after revolution of 1688,
343; effect of Reform Bill, 349.
Confirmatio Cartarum, its constitu-
tional value, 176.
Constitution, English, meaning of
the term, 3; its leading princi-
ples, 4; its law of progress, 6;
coeval with our nationality, 10.
12; its principles traced in Magna
Carta, and the Confirmatio Carta
rum, 178-220; its progress dur-
ing the fourteenth and fifteenth
centuries, 235-273; its

state

under the Tudors, 274-277; res-
cued by the Petition of Right,
290; further secured by Bill of
Rights, 317; its adaptation to our
present state, 394.

Constitution of the British Empire,
360.

Constitutional forms, their value, 363.
Constitutional morality, 363.
Convention, 309.

Copyholds, 103. 260, note.
Coroner, 140, note. 351.

Council, the King's, 195. 264. 326;
Privy Council, their present
power, 334, note.

after the Counquest, 139, note.
171. 192. 221.
Crown. See "King."

Danish element of our nation, 35;
Danes first attack England, ib.;
Danish primitive institutions and
character, 36-38; extent of their
conquests and influence here, 39-
41.

Declaration of Rights, 309.
Discussion, free, right of, 392.
Dispensing power, 265. 303. 313.

Education in England, 356, note.
Elections, provisions for freedom of,
254. 314; attempts of Crown in
early times to influence, 257; of
James II., 303; how often held,
339.

Electors of knights of the shire, 192.
248. 260; under Reform Bill,
350.

in boroughs, 263; under
Reform Bill, 350.

probable numbers in four-
teenth century, 268. 270; at pre-
sent, 354.

Electoral Franchise, property and in-
telligence to be regarded in its
distribution, 350; how far now
accessible, 359.

English nation, its four elements, 13;
population at time of Conquest,
67; in John's reign, 72; at pre-
sent, 351.
Escuage, 102. 134.

Feudal system, its general character,
73. 83; peculiarities of, in Eng-
land, 84. 91; feudal tenures, 100-
104. 293.

Freedom of the press, 391, 392; of
public discussion, 392.
Freehold tenure, 293.
Frankpledge, 48. 99. 171. 210.

German, main stream of the English
nations, 16; German character,
19, 20; their habits and institu-
tions as described by Cæsar and

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and note.

Justices of the peace, 369, 370, 371.

Tacitus, 18-21. See also "Anglo- | Justices, who ought to be made, 155
Saxons."
"Germania" of Tacitus, its value for
both ancient and modern history,
10; quoted, 18, 19.
Grote, his remarks on kingship in
medieval Europe, 179, note; on
Constitutional Morality, 363.

Habeas Corpus, 149, note; 204-207.
293. 299; Habeas Corpus Acts,
295. 301, note.

History, unity of, 10.

Hundreds, a primitive institution of
ancient Germans, 19; of ancient
Danes, 37.

Hundred Court, 46. 100. 171.

Impeachment, 238. 381.

Institutional liberty, 362, note; 390.

Kings, early German ones, 18;
Danish, 36; Anglo-Saxon, 52;
Anglo-Norman, 90; kingly power
recognised in the Great Charter,
179; hereditary kingships, 179,
180.338; kingly power in England
a limited power, 181, 182; kingly
prerogatives in the times of the
later Plantagenets, 255; uncon-
stitutional pretensions of the
Stuarts, 274-277; general joy of
the nation when the king was re
stored in 1660, 299; limitation of
kingly power at revolution of 1688,
337; end of struggle between,
and people, 387; constitutional
position of our kings since then, ib.
352.

James II., his aggressions on the
Constitution, 307; his flight from
England, 316.
John-King John, his evil character,
its importance to our history,
106-110; his losses and quarrels,
110-113; the national rising
against him, 120; grants the Great
Charter, 126; his death, 165.
Judges of assize, 137, note.
Judges, how appointed and removed
before the Act of Will. III., 298;
made irremovable quamdiu se
bene gesserint, by Act of Settle-Lord-lieutenant, 363.
ment, 328.

Labouring classes, their former state
in England, 92; their present,
346; change in the character of, in
towns, 348.
Language, English, earliest specimen
of, 14.

Jury, trial by, a principle of the
Constitution, 4; recognised in the
Great Charter, 204-220; defini-
tion of, 205; jurors at first wit-
nesses, 206; gradual change in
this respect, 207. 216; probable
origin of trial by jury, 213. 216;
its value at the present time, 225.
383; early property qualification
required for jurors, 268; the
present, 386; trial by jury, how
viewed in fourteenth century, 269;
practice of fining jurors for their
verdicts, 298; declared illegal, ib.
Justice not to be sold. denied, or
delayed. 148. 153, note.

Liberty of the press, 392-394.

See

"Constitutional Liberty."
Local self-government, 18. 25. 34.

50. 52. 105. 261. 361. 372-377.

Lords, origin of the House of, 186;
advantages of, 198. 352; present
constitutional position, 386; judi-
cial power, 381. See also "Peers."

Magna Carta.-Primary record of the

Constitution, 3; how gained, 120-
126; text of John's Charter, with
explanatory notes, 130-164; re-
newed in Henry III.'s reign, 165;
text of, as confirmed by subsequent
kings, 166-175; principles of the
Constitution traced in, 178-220;
reverence paid to, 225; Mackin-
tosh's eulogium on, 228.

Majority, duties of, with regard to
the minority, 363.


Middle classes, increased power of, Pleas of the Crown, 139.

347. 350.

Ministers of State, 365.

Minority, obedience of, to majority,
363; why this is no degradation
in countries of institutional liberty,
ib., note.

Morality, constitutional, 363.

Political functions, how classified, 7.

352; how exercised in local self-
government, 360 387.

Population in Saxon times, 67; in
John's time, 72; present number,
351.
Premier, 365.

Municipal. See "Borough" and Press, power of, 347; liberty of, 355.

"Local self-government."

Mutiny Act, 328.

Nationality, English, dates from thir-
teenth century, 12-14; meaning
of the word, 14.
Nobility, English, difference between
and continental noblesse, 200.
Norman element of our nation, 56;
the Northmen, i. e. Normans, con-
quer Neustria, 57; characteristics
of the Normans, 58, 59; Norman
institutions before the conquest of
England, 59. 86; wretched state
of the peasantry of Normandy, 61;
Norman conquest of England, 62;
extent of changes caused here by
it, 65; beneficial to England, 55.

O'Connell's case, noble conduct of
the lay peers in, 381.
Official responsibility, 239.

Parish, 52. 361.

Parliament, 4. 182. 192; division
into two Houses, 197; growing
power of, after thirteenth century,
235, et seq.; convened and dis-
solved by king, 263; time for
holding, 346; its imperial cha-
racter, 360. See "Commons,"
"Electors," "Peers."

Pauperism, amount of, in England
357.

Peers, 182; how summoned to parlia-
ment, 187; peerage in England
hereditary, 186; peers, how cre-
ated by king, 187; attempt to
limit this, 340.

Privy council, 334.
Proclamation, royal, 326.
Property qualification, its universa-
lity in elections for local offices,
380.
Protestantism, its ascendancy in
England, 301.

Public meetings, aptitude of the
Anglo-American race for, 862.
Public opinion, present political power
of, 387. 390.
Purveyance, 143, note.

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Scandinavian. See "Danish."
Self-government, 196. See "Local
self-government."

Sheriff's office described, 140, note.
254. 368.

Slavery among ancient Germans, 19;
Danes, 36; Anglo-Saxons, 43;
its extent in England in Anglo-
Norman times. See "Villeinage."

Petition of Right, its constitutional
importance, 4; when and how ob-
tained, 283-291; its text, 291-Star Chamber, 275; abolished, 301.
Sub-infeudation, 78.

295.

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