Collectanea Politica: Or, The Political Transactions of Ireland from the Accession of ... George the III. to the Present Time ... |
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Side 389
... to the day of the date of the articles ; provided sa that no person whatsoever should have or enjoy the benefit * of that article , who should neglect or refuse to take the ** oath of allegiance made by act of parliament in England ...
... to the day of the date of the articles ; provided sa that no person whatsoever should have or enjoy the benefit * of that article , who should neglect or refuse to take the ** oath of allegiance made by act of parliament in England ...
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Collectanea Politica: Or, the Political Transactions of Ireland from the ... William Wenman Seward Ingen forhåndsvisning - 2020 |
Collectanea Politica: Or, the Political Transactions of Ireland from the ... William Wenman Seward Ingen forhåndsvisning - 2019 |
Almindelige termer og sætninger
addreſs advantage againſt alſo appear attachment attention authority becauſe become benefit bill body boroughs Britain Britiſh called carried caſe circumſtances committee Commons conduct conſider conſtitution continue corruption court crown duty effect elective England equal eſtabliſhed fame firſt France further gentlemen give granted honourable hope houſe imported intereſt Ireland Iriſh juſtice King kingdom land laſt late leave liberty Lord Majeſty Majeſty's manner manufacture means meaſure ment mind miniſter moſt motion moved muſt nature neceſſary never object obſerved opinion parliament penſion perſon petition preſent principle proceedings proper propoſed Proteſtant purpoſe queſtion reform repreſentation repreſentatives reſolution reſpect Roman Catholics royal ſaid ſame ſay ſeveral ſhall ſhe ſhould ſome ſtate ſubject ſuch ſupport taken themſelves theſe thing thoſe thought tion trade treaty uſe vote whole whoſe wiſh
Populære passager
Side 389 - Majesties' obedience, and their and every of their heirs shall hold, possess, and enjoy all and every their estates of freehold and inheritance, and all the rights, titles, and...
Side 360 - I do declare that I do not believe that the Pope of Rome or any other foreign prince, prelate, person, state, or potentate, hath or ought to have any temporal or civil jurisdiction, power, superiority, or pre-eminence, directly or indirectly, within this realm.
Side 36 - That in order to give permanency to the settlement now intended to be established, it is necessary that no prohibition, or new, or additional duties should be hereafter imposed in either kingdom, on the importation of any article of the growth, product, or manufacture of the other, except such additional duties as may be requisite to balance duties on internal consumption, pursuant to the foregoing resolution.
Side 191 - That it is the opinion of this committee, That it is the right and duty of the lords spiritual and temporal and commons of Great Britain now assembled, and lawfully, fully, and freely representing all the estates of the people of this realm, to provide the means of supplying the defect of the personal exercise of the royal authority, arising from...
Side 268 - What reward ? St. Nicholas Within or St. Nicholas Without ! The curse of Swift is upon him to have been born an Irishman ; to have possessed a genius, and to have used his talents for the good of his country.
Side 167 - The answer being entered on the journals, Mr. Grattan moved, " that his excellency the lord lieutenant having thought *' proper to decline to transmit to his Royal Highness...
Side 164 - England, eclipsed at your glory and your island, rose as it were from its bed, and got nearer to the sun ? In the arts that polish life — the inventions that accommodate ; the manufactures that adorn it — you will be for many years inferior to some other parts of Europe ; but, to nurse a growing people — to mature a struggling, though hardy community, to mould, to multiply, to consolidate, to inspire, and to exalt a young nation ; be these your barbarous accomplishments...
Side 377 - ... unless by the concurring verdicts of two juries of his neighbours and equals; whereby, and to this we humbly presume more particularly to implore your royal attention, we are deprived of the great palladium of the...
Side 332 - ... of possession to your majesty's Catholic subjects operates as a perpetual restraint and discouragement on industry and the spirit of cultivation, whereby it happens, that this your majesty's kingdom of Ireland, possessing many and great natural advantages of soil and climate, so as to be exceeded therein by few, if any countries on the earth, is yet prevented from availing...
Side 54 - Equal burdens will have opposite effects, ,they will fund the debt of one country and destroy the trade of the other; high duties will take away your resource, which is exemption from them; but will be a fund for Great Britain: thus the colony principle in its extent is dangerous to a very great degree. Suppose Great Britain should raise...