| Great Britain. Parliament - Great Britain - 1859 - 926 pages
...permanently on others. I will not dwell upon other points, for this is enough. But I cannot help saying that the measure which the Cabinet are prepared to recommend is one which we should all of us have strongly opposed if either Lord Palmerston or Lord John Kusscll had ventured to bring it forward. Under... | |
| History - 1860 - 876 pages
...permanently on others. I will not dwell upon other points, for this is enough. But I cannot help saying that the measure which the Cabinet are • prepared...Lord John Russell had ventured to bring it forward. (Laughter and Opposition dicers.) Under all these circumstances, I have no alternative but to repeat... | |
| Edmund Burke - History - 1860 - 900 pages
...permanently on others. I will not dwell upon other points, for this is enough. But I cannot help saying that the measure which the Cabinet are prepared to...should all of us have stoutly opposed, if either Lord Palmerstoii or Lord John llussell had ventured to bring it forward. (Laughter and Opposition dicers.)... | |
| Homersham Cox - 1868 - 244 pages
...every principle which the Conservatives as a party have always maintained. .... I cannot help saying that the measure which the Cabinet are prepared to recommend is one which we should all of us have strongly opposed if either Lord Palmerston or Lord John Russell had ventured to bring it forward, f... | |
| Homersham Cox - Great Britain - 1868 - 180 pages
...every principle which the Conservatives as a party have always maintained. .... I cannot help saying that the measure which the Cabinet are prepared to recommend is one which we should all of us have strongly opposed if either Lord Palmerston or Lord John Russell had ventured to bring it forward, f... | |
| Francis Hitchman - 1879 - 556 pages
...with the question at all from the Tory point of view, was in the meantime looked at with suspicion and uneasiness by the more pronounced Conservatives...somewhat more elaborate in his explanation, protesting in energetic terms against the notion of a hard and fast line on the question of the suffrage. His... | |
| Sir Theodore Martin - Great Britain - 1879 - 434 pages
...It was one,' said Mr. Walpole, speaking in the House of Commons (1st March, 1859), ' which we would all of us have stoutly opposed, if either Lord Palmerston or Lord John Eussell had brought it forward.' 2 No more than one million extra was asked for under this head. But... | |
| Justin McCarthy - Great Britain - 1880 - 496 pages
...that the measure which the Cabinet were prepared to recommend was one which they should all of them have stoutly opposed if either Lord Palmerston or...Lord John Russell had ventured to bring it forward. This seemed to Mr. Walpole reason enough for his declining to have anything to do with it. It did not... | |
| Francis Hitchman - 1881 - 674 pages
...pronounced Conservatives in the Administration the consequence being that when Mr. Disraeli's scheme^was brought forward in the Cabinet, Mr. Walpole and Mr....Lord Palmerston or Lord John Russell had ventured to brine; it forward." On the 1st of March, 1859, Mr. Walpole made his statement in the House, reading... | |
| Alexander Charles Ewald - Great Britain - 1881 - 274 pages
...have now determined to adopt on the important subject of parliamentary reform. I cannot help saying that the measure which the cabinet are prepared to...Lord John Russell had ventured to bring it forward. Under all these circumstances, I have no alternative but to repeat the request with which I commenced;... | |
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