The Annual Register, Bind 122Edmund Burke Rivingtons, 1881 |
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Side 11
... held out was that landowners should pay nothing for the first two years after the grant of each loan , and an annual sum , in discharge both of principal aud interest , of 3l . 88. 6d . per cent . for thirty - five years , commencing at ...
... held out was that landowners should pay nothing for the first two years after the grant of each loan , and an annual sum , in discharge both of principal aud interest , of 3l . 88. 6d . per cent . for thirty - five years , commencing at ...
Side 12
... held out the inducement of loans at one per cent . in November , there would , he said , by this time have been a sufficient amount of employment in the South and West of Ireland to meet all the necessities of the case . He held that ...
... held out the inducement of loans at one per cent . in November , there would , he said , by this time have been a sufficient amount of employment in the South and West of Ireland to meet all the necessities of the case . He held that ...
Side 21
... held personal apology and retractation to be sufficient . If , as in the case of the charges made by Mr. Ferrand against Sir James Graham and Sir James Weir Hogg , the accuser absolutely refused to retract , the honour of the individual ...
... held personal apology and retractation to be sufficient . If , as in the case of the charges made by Mr. Ferrand against Sir James Graham and Sir James Weir Hogg , the accuser absolutely refused to retract , the honour of the individual ...
Side 22
... held , as a peer had interfered in the election of the Commons . At the same meeting , Major Jocelyn had denounced Sir Charles Dilke for giving his support to " a despicable lot of Irish rebels . " Mr. Sullivan appealed to the leader of ...
... held , as a peer had interfered in the election of the Commons . At the same meeting , Major Jocelyn had denounced Sir Charles Dilke for giving his support to " a despicable lot of Irish rebels . " Mr. Sullivan appealed to the leader of ...
Side 40
... 'Gorman Mahon , maintained that the Home Rule movement aimed at closing the era of insurrection for Ireland . It was an olive branch held out at some risk to themselves , by certain public men 40 ] [ 1880 . ENGLISH HISTORY .
... 'Gorman Mahon , maintained that the Home Rule movement aimed at closing the era of insurrection for Ireland . It was an olive branch held out at some risk to themselves , by certain public men 40 ] [ 1880 . ENGLISH HISTORY .
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Side 215 - Published under the direction of the general council of medical education and registration of the United Kingdom, pursuant to the medical act (1858).
Side 143 - Term, 1833, he was called to the Bar by the Honourable Society of the Inner Temple, of which he became a Bencher.
Side 56 - Barre, a peerage, a pension, and the unusual honour of a seat in the Cabinet as Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, for Mr. Dunning, both his intimate friends and chief supporters in the House of Commons ; besides an understood obligation on the part of Mr.
Side 91 - WHEREAS it is expedient in the interests of good husbandry, and for the better security for the capital and labour invested by the occupiers of land in the cultivation of the soil, that further provision should be made to enable such occupiers to protect their crops from injury and loss by ground game...
Side 127 - The judges are the Lord Chancellor, the Lord Chief Justice, the Master of the Rolls, the President of the Probate, Divorce, and Admiralty Division, the Lords of Appeal in Ordinary, and former Lord Chancellors.
Side 32 - Ministers have hitherto been enabled to secure that peace, so necessary to the welfare of all civilised countries, and so peculiarly the interest of our own. But this ineffable blessing cannot be obtained by the passive principle of non-interference. Peace rests on the presence, not to say the ascendency, of England in the Councils of Europe. Even at this moment, the doubt, supposed to be inseparable from popular election, if it does not diminish, certainly arrests her influence, and is a main reason...
Side 248 - Esq., of the Bengal Civil Service, to be a Judge of the High Court of Judicature at Fort William, in Bengal, in the place of Sir Louis Stewart Jackson, CIE — 23.
Side 224 - Progression by Antagonism. A Theory, involving Considerations touching the Present Position, Duties, and Destiny of Great Britain.
Side 20 - That the freedom of speech, and debates or proceedings in Parliament, ought not to be impeached or questioned in any court or place out of Parliament.
Side 247 - Jan. 1 1. [The Queen has been pleased to direct Letters Patent to be passed under the Great Seal of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, granting the dignity of a Baron of the said United Kingdom unto Alfred Tennyson, Esq., and the heirs male of his body lawfully begotten...