HAMI-IiU.H PAPERS
... Min__t ...
... Min__t ...
... in the execution of the plan agreed upon for the safety of commerce and navigation. Letters from Syra, of the 29th March, speak of the surrender ofthe citadel of Athens as very near at hand, in consequence of several sanguinary actions which have taken ...
... clear conscience ; — at such a moment would I wish to steal on you, and stand honestly and firmly before you. Thus would I speak. (..Canning stands indicted by his country, of foul, unhandsome, anddishonestpractices, committed by him at different periods ...
... presentation, imputed to the Prime Minister, were justly imputed, that that is the very line he must take ; and that, technically speaking, he never can be convicted, if he persists in his resolution never to answer. We cannot but hail it as an auspicious com- ...
... whether he really believed that the priest had the power to forgive his sins ; to wliich he unhesitatingly answered, yes. M hen speaking of such a system, it was too much to expect measured language; and he must use his own even should it be again noticed in ...
... that was not tl.e only place in wliich the ice ol' putting these questions had obtained. It became him, on all occasions, to speak at the absent with respect: and, without losing sight of that duty, he might perhaps be allowed to say, that from certain things ...
... possessed as .Members of the Legislation ; the Chamber of Deputies appears now a mere cy- pher, of which nobody seems to think or speak ; the army, on whose zeal so much dependence had been placed during- the invasion of Chaves and his adherents, now gives symptoms ...
... powers to the Lord Chancellor. In intruding upon the attention of the house they must excuse him, for he did not wisli to speak of men, but measures : he had a duty to perform to his constituent! and the country, which he would not lie deterred from doing ...
... knew little of the practice of the house, if he considered him irregular in the course he was following. Lord HOLLAND ro*e to speak to order. The noble lord who s]>oke last was entirely in order as to that point, on account of which he had been called to ...
... toast should be heard (cheers). Ci.bi.ett U'c.n proueiicd to undress the company. If they would be as silent while he was speaking as they were while the chairman was addressing them, he should occupy but a very small portion of tbeir tirie. ir him who ...
... Mr. Canning (hear). i Alderman Thompiaon, M. P. could not give a silent vote on this occasion, though not in the habit of speaking much in public. If it were barely a question of presenting an address to the king, he would at once assent to it ; but he ...
... certain that it ought not even to be mysterious. Then, as to /ml 'it ieal principles — principles regarding that which all men speak of as the vital question of the day— the Roman Catholic Question ;if the political principles of the new Government were unknown ...