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LORD MELVILLE'S CRIMINALITY

... , was itself an answer to such objec- tions. With regard to the danger which threatened the Constitution, he denied that Slavery and Popery were inseparable, for could it bfe forgotten that the Great Charter, the foundation Of ouf6 liberties, had originated ...

LAW INTELLIGENCE

... 'which is omni. potent, could not do it; but his Majesty, by hi: ps- clan=ation, could not~give'the power to inflit if. And as slavery ceases the moineilt that a slave by birth touches 'on British ground, so the standard of a British conque. ror, plante on ...

LAW INTELLIGENCE

... -'lieferred to. rnoise during tse arguenest, but put what he calle~da pa~rahel.j' case-sayong, the K'iia carifot authori'ze slavery ini Engl~d which is against the lawvi anh' tvery omanis insratyre'em be comes to Enigland-mo, neither ran he by tlue law of ...

HIGH TREASON

... several times, to enter tie :Frenchsetvs-, statuig thdt itsha-l joined thern'. -t'tat the «nghlx; servicS was nothing but slavery,@ and -that @ lived liktte a gentleian while be was with the - -Fi~smasDissrALLY, a messmnatei of the prisoner's bo bc~rxd ...

SUMMARY OF POLITICS

... people,; citizeti, ad patriot,: were 'used by .us a4 terms of reproach. But, wve. are now: become ab. hQrrers of tyranny, slavery, despotism.n We have nowr got 'over to the liberty side of the dispute;. and are subscribi ava' as heartily iagainst the EmAperor ...

OLD BAILEY

... condci& of a large portion ofthe British 'resa, which, bnaiting ihslf in ite'fieedom, ernpljyed-its energies to effc6t the slavery of others. At the same time we rejoice in thit brilliant Exceptions to this teelaincholy rule, Oeie of the riost re- harkable ...

COMMON COUNCIL

... larove of kieeping up- a military fotce, in order to up- to hold thle Government of Fralnce, dnd to keep tile people ri l1 in slavery and SUbjeffion. The wvorthy Alderman has ad 'saidl the general state of Europe w'as ituproved; a- wasa there a Basiile now ...

COURT OF COMMON COUNCIL

... ; he had been careful for all ?? ; he had insisted that all slaves, of ?? rank -or countrv, should be giren up. and that slavery should Ixtiit no loniget H eI lhad even done more, he had dernanded and obtained ! i, restitution of the sums of money paid ...

OLD BAILEY

... abolition of slavery ci from the Dey of Algiers, heretofore receiving sums of to money firomn the Ironmonger's Companiy for the redemp- its tion of British slaves, bequeathed to them in trust, by ha will of a former member having bwen himselfin slavery.' d We ...

COURT OF COMMON COUNCIL

... it, auttempjts art insjury-wtsheeer does it commits a robbery, -he throwes downr the distinction bet ween, libesrts, arsd slavery. -taxalion aind tvjpresnttts- tion are coeval with,, arid ssential to the Cgnsstitustiers. I %vish the maxim cf Machiavel ...

LAW INTELLIGENCE

... Ajax, to destroy us is the 10 open light of heaven, breathin~g Ousr appeal to the Goed of Free- I dam against the agents of slavery and denpotinsm. e embarked in the ms.l sins to conqsser France, andI we have conqtteced ourtieass'.: our Mlinisters Itaivo ...

LAW INTELLIGENCE

... far from coming under the menhing of the word T homage. e The vanquished appellant, it is true, being reduced to a state of slavery, would be obliged to do the accustomed acts of fealty or homage to his Lord, whoever lie might be; but this would I be an ...