The Whistler at the Plough: Containing Travels, Statistics, and Descriptions of Scenery and Agricultural Customs in Most Parts of England: with Letters from Ireland: Also "Free Trade and the League;" a Biography History, Volume 2J. Ainsworth; London, W. French, 1853 - Free trade |
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Page 85
... hear and give due weight to theirs . All parties there are dead - sick of the present state of things , and desire a return to constitutional government . Of course the extremes have their different crotchets for arriving at this end ...
... hear and give due weight to theirs . All parties there are dead - sick of the present state of things , and desire a return to constitutional government . Of course the extremes have their different crotchets for arriving at this end ...
Page 87
... hear or see , I would not give a year's purchase for our hold of it , if some great stroke is not given which shall turn men's thoughts from the channel in which they now run , and give a fresh impetus to public works , emigration , and ...
... hear or see , I would not give a year's purchase for our hold of it , if some great stroke is not given which shall turn men's thoughts from the channel in which they now run , and give a fresh impetus to public works , emigration , and ...
Page 125
... their author for taking out his diploma in the university of Lagoda , with the unani- mous approbation of the philosophers of the celebrated island of Laputa . He trusted that they should hear no FREE TRADE AND THE LEAGUE . 125.
... their author for taking out his diploma in the university of Lagoda , with the unani- mous approbation of the philosophers of the celebrated island of Laputa . He trusted that they should hear no FREE TRADE AND THE LEAGUE . 125.
Page 126
... hear no more of such observations , but that the question would be argued on its own merits . * His right honourable friend , the first lord of the admiralty , and other honourable members who had followed him in the debate , had very ...
... hear no more of such observations , but that the question would be argued on its own merits . * His right honourable friend , the first lord of the admiralty , and other honourable members who had followed him in the debate , had very ...
Page 142
... Hear ! " ) To what period did the noble lord who cheered refer ? Were they , in imitation of the report of the agricul- tural committee , to refer back only for a period of fifteen years ? What fair comparison could they possibly ...
... Hear ! " ) To what period did the noble lord who cheered refer ? Were they , in imitation of the report of the agricul- tural committee , to refer back only for a period of fifteen years ? What fair comparison could they possibly ...
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Common terms and phrases
amount Anti-Corn-Law attention bill Bowring British carried cause chairman chamber Cheers classes Cobden commercial committee Company's Corn Laws cotton directors East India Company Ebenezer Elliott effect election England English established exports fact farmer favour feeling fixed duty Free Trade French gentleman hear House of Commons Hume Huskisson important increase industry interest John Joseph Hume labour land League legislation legislature Lord Lord John Russell Lord Sydenham Lower Canada Manchester manufactures meeting ment merchants monopoly motion never O'Connell obtained occasion opinion parliament party period persons petition political Poulett Thomson present principles produce protection province Prussia question reform repeal revenue right honourable right honourable friend Rochdale session shew Sir Robert Peel Smith speech Stalybridge success Thomas Clarkson thought Thousand Pounds tion town Upper Canada Villiers vote Walsall