The Parliamentary Debates, Volumen2

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Published under the superintendence of T.C. Hansard, 1821
 

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Página 275 - Try me, good king; but let me have a lawful trial, and let not my sworn enemies sit as my accusers and judges : yea, let me receive an open trial, for my truth shall fear no open shame...
Página 59 - And though a linguist should pride himself to have all the tongues that Babel cleft the world into, yet if he have not studied the solid things in them as well as the words and lexicons, he were nothing so much to be esteemed a learned man, as any yeoman or tradesman competently wise in his mother dialect only.
Página 213 - Highness visited, with indecent and offensive familiarity and freedom, and carried on a licentious, disgraceful, and adulterous. intercourse...
Página 657 - I am informed, have furnished, or enabled me to furnish, your Majesty with the questions as well as the answers. Mrs. Lisle, it should also be observed, was at the time of her examination, under the severe oppression of having, but a few days before, heard of the death of her daughter ; — a daughter, who had been happily married, and who had lived happily with her husband, in mutual attachment till her death. The very circumstance of her then situation would naturally give a graver and severer...
Página 647 - In most civilized countries, acting under a sense of the force of sacred obligations, it has had the sanctions of religion superadded. It then becomes a religious as well as a natural and civil contract : for it is a great mistake to suppose that because it is the one, therefore it may not likewise be the other.
Página 647 - Marriage, in its origin, is a contract of natural law ; it may exist between two individuals of different sexes, although no third person existed in the world, as happened in the case of the common ancestors of mankind : It is the parent, not the child, of civil society, " Prmci" poem urbis et quasi seminarium Reipubliccet." — In civil society it becomes a civil contract, regulated and prescribed by law, and endowed with civil consequences.
Página 673 - I will, for one, never withdraw from her those sentiments of dutiful homage which I owe to her rank, to her situation, to her superior mind, to her great and royal heart; nor, my Lords, will I ever pay to any one who may usurp her Majesty's station, that respect which belongs alone to her whom the laws of God and...
Página 213 - And be it enacted by the King's most excellent Majesty, by and with the advice and consent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal...
Página 867 - Did you ever go before by your father's desire to speak to Colonel Brown or to any body else ? — Never : before my father spoke to me, I never went to any place. Had you ever seen Colonel Brown before you went to speak to him at Milan ? — Never. How did you support yourself on the journey from Vienna to Milan, when you went to speak to Colonel Brown ? — My father paid my journey.
Página 1079 - Will you swear they dined onre in thr inn during the whole time they were there? 1 cannot swear to that, because I have never seen that they dined there ; I have not paid attention to it, I had other business. Will you swear that the princess and Pergami did not dine at court every day they were in your house living?

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