History of the Regency and Reign of King George the Fourth, Parts 2-3; Part 8William Cobbett, 1830 - Great Britain |
From inside the book
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... compelled to follow , in this respect , the example of the church ; and thus the commons were the joint - proprietors , in fact , of the whole country ; they acknowledged the owner as lord of the soil ; but they held the estates for ...
... compelled to follow , in this respect , the example of the church ; and thus the commons were the joint - proprietors , in fact , of the whole country ; they acknowledged the owner as lord of the soil ; but they held the estates for ...
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... compelled to return under their ancient yoke ; or , that a change must take place in England , restoring to the people the right of freely choosing their representatives ; the con- sequences of which , to this aristocracy , were too ...
... compelled to return under their ancient yoke ; or , that a change must take place in England , restoring to the people the right of freely choosing their representatives ; the con- sequences of which , to this aristocracy , were too ...
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... compelled to resort to a paper - money , and to make it a legal tender . This was a very import- ant crisis in the affairs of the septennial parlia- ment and of the aristocracy , and the consequences which have resulted , and will ...
... compelled to resort to a paper - money , and to make it a legal tender . This was a very import- ant crisis in the affairs of the septennial parlia- ment and of the aristocracy , and the consequences which have resulted , and will ...
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... compelled to put a regency into his hands , had so put it with all the trammels and all the de- grading conditions contained and expressed in the Regency Bill just described . How , then , were people in general to imagine that he would ...
... compelled to put a regency into his hands , had so put it with all the trammels and all the de- grading conditions contained and expressed in the Regency Bill just described . How , then , were people in general to imagine that he would ...
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... compelled to keep the ministers in their places , or to encounter all the dreadful hostility that they were thus enabled to raise up against him . Whether he really at first intended to change the ministry , one may doubt . The sending ...
... compelled to keep the ministers in their places , or to encounter all the dreadful hostility that they were thus enabled to raise up against him . Whether he really at first intended to change the ministry , one may doubt . The sending ...
Common terms and phrases
affairs Allies American amongst answer aristocracy army Bank of England bill Bourbon British brought called Captain CASTLEREAGH cause Christian Majesty commanded compelled conduct DARTMOOR death debts declaration Duke duty effect enemy England English Europe fact faction France French frigate George give gold hands honour House of Commons hundred justice killed king king's kingdom letter London Lord Lord Castlereagh Lord GRENVILLE Lord MOIRA majesty's ment mind ministers ministry month NAPOLEON nation navy never officers paragraph Paris parliament party passed peace PERCEVAL persons PITT possession pounds present Treaty Prince Regent prince's princess Princess of Wales prisoners prisoners of war queen reform regard regency and reign respect royal highness Russia ships signed sovereign taxes thing thousand tion took transactions Treaty of Paris troops United Wales Whigs whole words wounded