The Pamphleteer, Volume 2A.J. Valpy, 1813 - Great Britain |
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Page 2
... University of Cambridge . Third Edition , not published X. Substance of the Speech of W. HUSKISSON , Esq . in the House of Commons , in a Committee of the whole House , upon the resolutions proposed by the Chancellor of the Exchequer ...
... University of Cambridge . Third Edition , not published X. Substance of the Speech of W. HUSKISSON , Esq . in the House of Commons , in a Committee of the whole House , upon the resolutions proposed by the Chancellor of the Exchequer ...
Page 61
... universities , and even to national synods and to Popes them- selves , all of which have their due and appropriate weight , but still cannot command the internal assent of the Catholic . Universality of doctrine alone , universality ...
... universities , and even to national synods and to Popes them- selves , all of which have their due and appropriate weight , but still cannot command the internal assent of the Catholic . Universality of doctrine alone , universality ...
Page 69
... Universities , with all their noble furniture , and all their orderly regulations ; and the far greater part of the parochial churches , colleges , and charitable establish- ments , that meet the eye in every direction , and inspire ...
... Universities , with all their noble furniture , and all their orderly regulations ; and the far greater part of the parochial churches , colleges , and charitable establish- ments , that meet the eye in every direction , and inspire ...
Page 73
... University of Cambridge , an advocate of those very principles , which the writers of your Church have urged against the Re- formation . You suppose , that I have abandoned " the vital principle of Protestantism ; " that I have conceded ...
... University of Cambridge , an advocate of those very principles , which the writers of your Church have urged against the Re- formation . You suppose , that I have abandoned " the vital principle of Protestantism ; " that I have conceded ...
Page 78
... University Press was twenty thousand less , than during an equal period immediately preceding the formation of that Society . From a subsequent examination which I should have thought unnecessary , if a very partial statement had not ...
... University Press was twenty thousand less , than during an equal period immediately preceding the formation of that Society . From a subsequent examination which I should have thought unnecessary , if a very partial statement had not ...
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Popular passages
Page 318 - We must not count with certainty on a continuance of our present prosperity during such an interval ; but unquestionably there never was a time in the history of this country, when, from the situation of Europe, we might more reasonably expect fifteen years of peace, than we may at the present moment.
Page 190 - Glory is the reward of science, and those who deserve it, scorn all meaner views...
Page 187 - is Tonson. You will take care not to depart before he goes away : for I have not completed the sheet which I promised him ; and if you leave me unprotected, I must suffer all the rudeness to which his resentment can prompt his tongue.
Page 495 - India, for the purpose of accomplishing those benevolent designs. Provided always, that the authority of the local Governments, respecting the intercourse of Europeans with the interior of the country, be preserved, and that the principles of the British Government, on which the natives of India have hitherto relied for the free exercise of their religion, be inviolably maintained.
Page 194 - No disposition, no transfer of paper upon which the composition is written, marked, or impressed, (though it gives the power to print and publish) can be construed a conveyance of the copy, without the author's express consent 'to print and publish'; much less, against his will.
Page 310 - That Freeholders, Householders, and others, subject to direct Taxation in support of the Poor, the Church, and the State, be required to elect Members to serve in Parliament. That each County be subdivided according to its taxed male Population, and each subdivision required to elect one Representative. That the Votes be taken in each Parish by the' Parish Officers ; and all the Elections finished in one and the same day.
Page 306 - Parliament, as the petition of the " Friends of the People, associated for the purpose of obtaining a Reform in Parliament.
Page 307 - That your honourable house will he pleased to take such measures, as to your wisdom may seem meet, to remove the evils arising from the unequal manner in which the different parts of the kingdom are admitted to participate in the representation. To correct the partial distribution of the elective franchise, which commits the choice of representatives to select bodies of men of such limited numbers as renders them an easy prey to the artful, or a ready purchase to the wealthy. To regulate the right...
Page 305 - Commons for leave to bring in a Bill to amend the representation of the people in England and Wales.
Page 304 - That leave be given to bring in a bill to amend the representation of the people of England in Parliament.