Free Trade and the League: A Biographic History of the Pioneers of Freedom of Opinion, Commercial Enterprise, & Civilisation, in Britain ...James Ainsworth, 1853 - Free trade |
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Page 4
... attention and became the especia favourite of the good old King , George III . , then residing there for the benefit of his marine excursions , and whose partiality to children is well known . His elder brother yet remembers the terror ...
... attention and became the especia favourite of the good old King , George III . , then residing there for the benefit of his marine excursions , and whose partiality to children is well known . His elder brother yet remembers the terror ...
Page 7
... attention the farther they were removed from her immediate care . With his former tutors , likewise , Mr Woolley and Mr Church , he kept up for some years an affec- tionate , and to him most salutary , intercourse , receiving from them ...
... attention the farther they were removed from her immediate care . With his former tutors , likewise , Mr Woolley and Mr Church , he kept up for some years an affec- tionate , and to him most salutary , intercourse , receiving from them ...
Page 11
... attention from the city business , to which it was desirable that he should devote himself : neither , it is clear , had at this time the least idea of the powers possessed by him , and before long to be brought into active exertion ...
... attention from the city business , to which it was desirable that he should devote himself : neither , it is clear , had at this time the least idea of the powers possessed by him , and before long to be brought into active exertion ...
Page 13
... attention in the house . The first occasion on which Mr Thomson delivered his sen- timents at any length or with apparent preparation , was in the debate raised by General Gascoigne on the state of the shipping interest , on the 7th of ...
... attention in the house . The first occasion on which Mr Thomson delivered his sen- timents at any length or with apparent preparation , was in the debate raised by General Gascoigne on the state of the shipping interest , on the 7th of ...
Page 14
... attention upon other points on which he , perhaps , does not deserve it . But a parliamentary reputation is like a woman's - it must be exposed as little as possible ; and I am so sensible of this , that I would willingly abstain from ...
... attention upon other points on which he , perhaps , does not deserve it . But a parliamentary reputation is like a woman's - it must be exposed as little as possible ; and I am so sensible of this , that I would willingly abstain from ...
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Common terms and phrases
amount Anti-Corn-Law argument attention bill Bowring British carried cause chairman chamber Cheers classes Cobden commercial committee Company's Corn Laws cotton directors East India Company effect election England English established exports fact farmer favour feeling fixed duty Free Trade French gentleman give hear House of Commons Hume Huskisson important increase industry interest John John Bright Joseph Hume labour land League legislation legislature Lord Lord John Russell Lord Sydenham Lower Canada Manchester manufactures meeting ment merchants millions monopoly 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 Thomas Clarkson thought Thousand Pounds tion town Upper Canada vote Walsall
Popular passages
Page 155 - To THE HONOURABLE THE COMMONS OF GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND, IN PARLIAMENT ASSEMBLED.
Page 352 - the doing good to mankind, in obedience to the will of God, and for the sake of everlasting happiness.
Page 373 - Child, is thy father dead? Father is gone ! Why did they tax his bread? God's will be done ! Mother has sold her bed : Better to die than wed ! Where shall she lay her head? Home we have none ! Father clammed1 thrice a week — God's will be done ! Long for work did he seek, Work he found none.
Page 478 - See these inglorious Cincinnati swarm, Farmers of war, dictators of the farm; Their ploughshare was the sword in hireling hands, Their fields manured by gore of other lands; Safe in their barns, these Sabine tillers sent Their brethren out to battle— why? for rent! Year after year they voted cent, per cent., Blood, sweat, and tear-wrung millions— why, for rent!
Page 262 - By this bill a board of control was erected, consisting of six members of the privy council, who were "to check, superintend and control all acts, operations and concerns which in anywise relate to the civil or military government or revenues of the territories and possessions of the East India company.
Page 375 - POET'S EPITAPH. Stop, Mortal ! Here thy brother lies, The Poet of the Poor. His books were rivers, woods, and skies, The meadow, and the moor; His teachers were the torn hearts...
Page 354 - The difference, and the only difference, is this; that, in the one case we consider what we shall gain or lose in the present world ; in the other case, we consider also what we shall gain or lose in the world to come.
Page 338 - What I learnt afterwards was — that though no attendance more than one was ever bestowed, three were on every occasion regularly charged for ; for each of the two falsely pretended attendances, .the client being, by the Solicitor, charged with a fee for himself, as also with a fee of 6s.
Page 93 - But when they came to their own affairs, and, above all, to the money matters, there was a scene of confusion and riot of which no one in England can have any idea. Every man proposes a vote for his own job; and bills are introduced without notice, and carried through all their stages in a quarter of an hour!
Page 478 - d , they dined , they drank , they swore they meant To die for England— why then live?— for rent! The peace has made one general malcontent Of these high-market patriots; war was rent! Their love of country, millions all misspent, How reconcile? by reconciling rent!