HER MAJESTY'S SPEECH
... He believed that ' the distress would be permanent, so long as the present system of legislation should continue. [left speaking.] ...
... He believed that ' the distress would be permanent, so long as the present system of legislation should continue. [left speaking.] ...
... artizons and manufacturers of this country. It is also to be regretted that Mr. Ironside should so fre- quently write and speak on matters of which he is either utterly ignorant, or only ?? informed. Were he more careful to learn facts, before be utters ...
... RICHMOND warned the last speaker that the time might come when it woulel be fortunate for him to be shorn of his honours. To speak plainly, he thought the agricultural interest had been slighted in the speech from the Uirone, which, as he understood it, ...
... v.as string iv death. Th. fire of fatal fever Bura'd darkly em his cheek, And often to his moth -r He spoke, or tried tee speak : 1 felt, as if from slumber 1 never cemld awake : Oh, il either, give nic something lo cherish for \our sake ! A cold, dead ...
... previously existed tee a free hit rcourse by sea between the nations of the world. It was notthus that her Majesty could speak, when the relaxation ot our protective system was refused in 1841, and when a Parliament was elected avowedly to maintain ...
... Let this raw material of a nation's industry be as free as other raw materials. I call upon the Noble Lord (J. Rus- sell; to speak frankly on this subject. Let the Noble Lord — v fitting man — come forward and do justice to the land, and he wiU find plentiful ...
... to remove the anomaly that Crown-appointed magistrates are allowed to tax the people without control. So far was he from speaking thus, that he half apologised for permitting the bill to be intro- duced by saying, that he was not prepared to express ...
... General. (From the Venerable Archdeacon of Ross.) Aghadown Glebe, Skibbereen, Co. Cork, Aug. 22, 1849. Dear Sir,— l cannot speak too favourably of the Revalenta Arabica. ALEXS. STUART, Archdeacon of Ross. SC Saviour's, Leeds, Dec. 9th, 1847. ?? .For ...
... hatchments and cathedral tombs.' We heartily agree with the writer as to the real causes of this debasement. But he also speaks of the sei fish competition and heartless individualism that mark these times, and in doing so, he passes from the cause ...
... to the surplice of ministration instead of the word and vital truths of God, — and telling me (for unfortunately I am not speaking of imaginery cases) that they must cling to those antiquated follies, un- sanctioned alike by the letter and spirit of Christ ...
... to be appointed to auodier court. M. Thiers is again confined to his chamber with the malady in his tongue. He is unable to speak, aud is obli- ged to use signs for communication. From an article of M. Sainte-Beuve, one of the most renowned of the French ...
... game in which is preserved by Messrs. Jubb and S. S. Deakin. Thomas Baker had a gun, and Wm. Baker a stick, and two dogs. On speaking to them, Thos. Baker said he had a right to be Uiere. . . .Mr. Badger, for the de- fence, did not deny that Thos. Baker was ...